The collaborative turn is not a short-term policy trend but a profound institutional transformation that has taken diverse forms in each Nordic welfare state. The different experiences underscore that governance regimes, institutional logics and path dependency are key to the outcome of the collaborative turn. This final summarizing chapter argues that collaboration is not just about participation; power, values and institutional design also play their part. Co-production emerges from contextual experimentation rather than fixed models, bridging top-down and bottom-up initiatives through effective collaboration and blending municipal structures with citizen-driven initiatives. Realization also hinges on negotiating power, building trust-based relationships and harnessing the hybrid roles that civil society can play as both a service provider and a democratic innovator rather than merely a supplementary partner. Additionally, capacity-building and peer learning are fundamental pillars for embedding co-production into organizational cultures. The evolving Nordic collaborative turn offers a model for participatory, resilient and inclusive welfare governance, demonstrating that the future of the welfare state lies in shared creation, shared responsibility and shared learning. In short, the collaborative turn represents a critical evolution of the Nordic welfare model, blending tradition with innovation and universalism with pluralism in the ongoing pursuit of social welfare and democratic participation.

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The Collaborative Turn in the Nordic Countries

  • Bernard Enjolras,
  • Linda Lundgaard Andersen,
  • Johan Vamstad,
  • Ari Nieminen

摘要

The collaborative turn is not a short-term policy trend but a profound institutional transformation that has taken diverse forms in each Nordic welfare state. The different experiences underscore that governance regimes, institutional logics and path dependency are key to the outcome of the collaborative turn. This final summarizing chapter argues that collaboration is not just about participation; power, values and institutional design also play their part. Co-production emerges from contextual experimentation rather than fixed models, bridging top-down and bottom-up initiatives through effective collaboration and blending municipal structures with citizen-driven initiatives. Realization also hinges on negotiating power, building trust-based relationships and harnessing the hybrid roles that civil society can play as both a service provider and a democratic innovator rather than merely a supplementary partner. Additionally, capacity-building and peer learning are fundamental pillars for embedding co-production into organizational cultures. The evolving Nordic collaborative turn offers a model for participatory, resilient and inclusive welfare governance, demonstrating that the future of the welfare state lies in shared creation, shared responsibility and shared learning. In short, the collaborative turn represents a critical evolution of the Nordic welfare model, blending tradition with innovation and universalism with pluralism in the ongoing pursuit of social welfare and democratic participation.