000 01904nam a2200169 4500
999 _c511724
_d511724
008 191006b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aBoyer, Eric J.
_911951
245 _aCitizen attitudes towards public-private partnerships
260 _bAmerican Review of Public Administration
300 _a49(3), Apr, 2019: p.259-274.
520 _aThis study examines the factors that influence public attitudes toward public–private partnerships (PPPs) through an analysis of public opinion data collected in 2014. Although previous literature has examined public attitudes toward government contracting and asset privatization, there is little understanding of how the public feels about more collaborative forms of public–private interaction. Counter to previous studies that suggest that support for free enterprise and a disdain for government increases support for private involvement in public services, we find that attitudes toward PPPs are nuanced: Respondents favor them not only when they have positive feelings toward the business sector but also when they also report trust in government. PPPs are thus perceived not as a replacement to public administration, but as a delivery model that demands competence and trust of both public and private partners. The results also explain a previously unstudied relationship between respondent familiarity with PPPs and their attitudes toward them. Counter to expectations, we find that the more familiarity that respondents have with PPPs, the more likely they are to view them favorably. We also identify factors that predict public opinions of PPPs which can inform public outreach and public involvement programs involved with PPPs. - Reproduced.
650 _aPublic opinion
_911952
700 _aSlyke, David M. Van
_911953
773 _aAmerican Review of Public Administration
906 _aPublic private partnerships
942 _2ddc
_cAR