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In recent years, the search for innovative, locally relevant and
engaging public service has become the new philosophers' stone.
Social procurement represents one approach to maximising public
spending and social value through the purchase of goods and
services. It has gained increasing attention in recent years as a
way that governments and corporations can amplify the benefits of
their purchasing power, and as a mechanism by which markets for
social enterprise and other third sector organisations can be
grown. Despite growing policy and practitioner interest in social
procurement, there has been relatively little conceptual or
empirical thinking published on the issue. Taking a critically
informed approach, this innovative text examines emerging
approaches to social procurement within the context of New Public
Governance (NPG), and examines the practices of social procurement
across Europe, North America, and Australia. Considering both the
possibilities and limitations of social procurement, and the types
of value it can generate, it also provides empirically-driven
insights into the practicalities of 'triple bottom line'
procurement, the related challenges of measuring social value and
the management of both the strategic and operational dimensions of
procurement processes. As such it will be invaluable reading for
all those interested in social services, public governance and
social enterprise.
In recent years, the search for innovative, locally relevant and
engaging public service has become the new philosophers' stone.
Social procurement represents one approach to maximising public
spending and social value through the purchase of goods and
services. It has gained increasing attention in recent years as a
way that governments and corporations can amplify the benefits of
their purchasing power, and as a mechanism by which markets for
social enterprise and other third sector organisations can be
grown. Despite growing policy and practitioner interest in social
procurement, there has been relatively little conceptual or
empirical thinking published on the issue. Taking a critically
informed approach, this innovative text examines emerging
approaches to social procurement within the context of New Public
Governance (NPG), and examines the practices of social procurement
across Europe, North America, and Australia. Considering both the
possibilities and limitations of social procurement, and the types
of value it can generate, it also provides empirically-driven
insights into the practicalities of 'triple bottom line'
procurement, the related challenges of measuring social value and
the management of both the strategic and operational dimensions of
procurement processes. As such it will be invaluable reading for
all those interested in social services, public governance and
social enterprise.
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