01479nam a22001217a 4500008004100000100001800041245007000059260002700129300003400156520105900190650008101249773002701330220302b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aDawkins, Ryan aPrivate contracting and citizen attitudes toward local government aUrban Affairs Review  a57(5), Sep, 2021: p.1286-1311 aLawmakers use privatized service delivery to simultaneously maintain low taxes while also satisfying citizen demands for high-quality public goods and services. However, what effect does private contracting have on people’s attitudes toward local government? I design a survey experiment that tests how public–private collaborations alter how people attribute responsibility to government for the successes and failures of the delivery of goods and services. I show that private contracting makes it less likely that people will connect public services to government, which erodes their evaluations of government performance and the feeling that local government represents their interests. Moreover, I show that citizens are also more likely to blame local government for private service delivery failures than they are to praise it for private service delivery successes. This asymmetry in responsibility attribution makes it difficult for local governments to build support among its citizens when it relies on private contracting. – Reproduced  aUrban politics, Experiment, Representation, Local government, Public opinion aUrban Affairs Review