Collaborative governance under austerity in Montreal 2015-2017

Hamel, Pierre and Keil, Roger and Autin, Grégoire and Davies, Jonathan (2018). Collaborative governance under austerity in Montreal 2015-2017. [Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Service. 10.5255/UKDA-SN-853362

Austerity governance, defined as a sustained agenda for reducing public spending, poses new challenges for the organisation of relationships between government, business and citizens in many parts of the world. This project compares how these challenges are addressed in eight countries: Australia, Canada, France, Greece, Ireland, Spain, the UK and the USA. Governments have long sought effective ways of engaging citizen activists and business leaders in decision making, through many formal and informal mechanisms - what we term collaborative governance. The focus of our research is how collaboration contributes to the governance of austerity. Governments and public service leaders argue that collaboration with businesses, voluntary organisations and active citizens is essential for addressing the many challenges posed by austerity. The challenges include transforming public services to cope with cuts, changing citizen expectations and managing demand for services and enhancing the legitimacy of difficult policy decisions by involving people outside government in making them. But at the same time, collaboration can be exclusionary. For example, if there are high levels of protest, governmental and business elites may collaborate in ways that marginalise ordinary citizens to push through unpopular policies. Our challenge is to explore different ways in which collaboration works or fails in governing austerity and whether it is becoming more or less important in doing so. We propose to compare the role of collaboration in governing austerity in eight cities of the aforementioned countries: Athens, Baltimore, Barcelona, Dublin, Leicester, Melbourne, Montreal and Nantes. It is in towns and cities that government has the most immediate and closest day-to-day engagement with citizens and it is for this reason that we chose to locate our research at the urban scale. Our primary objective is to understand whether, and if so how, collaboration among public officials, citizens, business leaders and other actors contributes to austerity governance. For example is there more collaboration, less or are we seeing different kinds of collaboration emerging? Who, if anyone, refuses to collaborate and with what implications for governing austerity? Might collaboration be a way to subvert or resist aspects of austerity? The research is comparative, meaning that it is looking for patterns and to see what lessons and insights countries in different parts of the world might draw from one another. Finding ways to collaborate with citizens has always been important for central and local governments, although collaboration has been a higher political priority in the past 20 years than before. Our study will tell politicians and public officials much about how collaboration works as a way of governing austerity. However we are not trying to 'sell' collaboration, or suggest that those suffering from cuts and wanting to resist them should collaborate if they do not wish to. For citizen activists our research will highlight different strategies and options for speaking truth to power - by engaging with city government and local business elites, or refusing to do so and perhaps focusing on protest instead. We will discover when collaboration serves the ends of community groups and when it does not. Participants in our study, and others, will have the opportunity to discuss these issues at a series of local events, at which we will discuss our findings. The research will also engage with important academic debates about the changing nature of governance. In gathering and comparing a large body of data we will learn about the changing role of government under austerity and whether governing is becoming more elite-focused, remote and hierarchical, or perhaps even more inclusive despite the challenging times in which we live.

Data description (abstract)

This collection presents data from 37 interviews' abstracts. These interviews were conducted in Montreal (Quebec, Canada) with key officials, public managers, community organizers and workers, representatives of Charity foundations, activists and trade unionists. This research aimed at understanding how austerity measures are affecting governance structures and collaboration between various actors: how are governance and collaboration structures coping with austerity and the tensions that derive from it? Very few, if any, of our respondent disagreed that a better "rigour" ("rigueur" is the euphemism commonly used by Quebec official to talk about austerity) is necessary in respect with public finances. But most of them rejected the way it was implemented: the authoritarianism of it, the lack of collaboration. What was most striking, in our results, is this consensus on the necessity to redefine the Welfare Model without any agreements on what new model of social solidarity should be implemented. This data collection presents the various trends within Montreal's civil society and local government that indicate what new model of social solidarity might emerge. This data collection is made up of the translated abstracts of the interview we've conducted.

Data creators:
Creator Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
Hamel Pierre Université de Montréal
Keil Roger York University
Autin Grégoire Université de Montréal
Davies Jonathan De Montfort University
Sponsors: Economic and Social Research Council
Grant reference: ES/L012898/1
Topic classification: Social welfare policy and systems
Keywords: Montreal, Welfare crisis, local government, Collaborative Governance
Project title: Collaborative Governance in Cities under Austerity: An Eight-case Comparative Study
Grant holders: Jonathan Davies, Ioannis Chorianopoulos, Helen Sullivan, David Howarth, Roger Keil, Ismael Blanco, Steven Griggs, Niamh Gaynor, Brendan Gleeson, Pierre Hamel
Project dates:
FromTo
1 April 201531 July 2018
Date published: 07 Dec 2018 15:13
Last modified: 07 Dec 2018 15:13

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