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100 _aMerdan Seker, Shearmur, Richard and Beaudet, Gérard
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245 _aDefying stereotypes, populism, and neoliberal discourse: Municipal agility and innovation during COVID
260 _aUrban Affairs Review
300 _a60(5), Sep, 2024: p.1323-1348
520 _aLocal governments are often viewed as basic service and infrastructure providers that are neither particularly proactive nor innovative: in certain influential circles, this view has taken on the trappings of “common-sense,” and underpins the protracted undermining of public-sector organizations, a hallmark of neoliberalism. However, the COVID crisis required municipalities to act with agility and speed, belying this “common sense.” We examine 54 examples of how municipalities in Québec adapted to the pandemic. The range of adaptation and innovation that we report illustrates that local government can be flexible, agile, and innovative when necessary. Our analysis suggests that innovation is not always desired by the innovator, that the impact of a project should be distinguished from its innovativeness, and that any assessment of municipal innovativeness and its impact requires careful consideration of who it is evaluated for, who it is evaluated by, and in what context.- Reproduced https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/10780874231221469
650 _aLocal governance, Public sector, Innovation, Covid.
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773 _aUrban Affairs Review
942 _cAR