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Institutional Incentives for Sustainable Public Procurement : a Case Study of Sustainability Considerations in the Swedish Construction Sector

Wedin Hansson, Lina LU and Johansson, Susanna LU (2017) In The Public Procurement Law Review 26(5). p.220-235
Abstract
The possibility to integrate sustainability considerations in the public procurement process has been debated over recent decades, resulting in several legislative changes. Collaboration between public and private sectors is emphasised as important in the development of sustainable public procurement but few studies focus on public-private collaboration related to sustainable public procurement. This article contributes to this area of research through an empirical case study of the integration of social and environmental considerations in Swedish public procurement of construction work. A pilot project to enable employment of youth in a construction project is used as a case study. An analysis is conducted of the institutional incentives... (More)
The possibility to integrate sustainability considerations in the public procurement process has been debated over recent decades, resulting in several legislative changes. Collaboration between public and private sectors is emphasised as important in the development of sustainable public procurement but few studies focus on public-private collaboration related to sustainable public procurement. This article contributes to this area of research through an empirical case study of the integration of social and environmental considerations in Swedish public procurement of construction work. A pilot project to enable employment of youth in a construction project is used as a case study. An analysis is conducted of the institutional incentives that exist regarding sustainability considerations, both from the perspective of the public sector actor (the procuring authority) and the private sector actor (the contractor). A model of institutional incentives is developed that broadens the concept of incentives for use beyond merely regulative incentives or financial or contractual incentives. The findings show that regulative incentives have been subordinated other types of institutional incentives in sustainable public procurement practice. The complexity of institutional incentives is important to highlight in order to understand sustainable public procurement in practice, and what factors may contribute as well as hinder the decision-making processes related to sustainability objectives. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
The possibility to integrate sustainability considerations in the public procurement process has been debated over recent decades, resulting in several legislative changes. Collaboration between public and private sectors is emphasised as important in the development of sustainable public procurement but few studies focus on public-private collaboration related to sustainable public procurement. This article contributes to this area of research through an empirical case study of the integration of social and environmental considerations in Swedish public procurement of construction work. A pilot project to enable employment of youth in a construction project is used as a case study. An analysis is conducted of the institutional incentives... (More)
The possibility to integrate sustainability considerations in the public procurement process has been debated over recent decades, resulting in several legislative changes. Collaboration between public and private sectors is emphasised as important in the development of sustainable public procurement but few studies focus on public-private collaboration related to sustainable public procurement. This article contributes to this area of research through an empirical case study of the integration of social and environmental considerations in Swedish public procurement of construction work. A pilot project to enable employment of youth in a construction project is used as a case study. An analysis is conducted of the institutional incentives that exist regarding sustainability considerations, both from the perspective of the public sector actor (the procuring authority) and the private sector actor (the contractor). A model of institutional incentives is developed that broadens the concept of incentives for use beyond merely regulative incentives or financial or contractual incentives. The findings show that regulative incentives have been subordinated other types of institutional incentives in sustainable public procurement practice. The complexity of institutional incentives is important to highlight in order to understand sustainable public procurement in practice, and what factors may contribute as well as hinder the decision-making processes related to sustainability objectives. (Less)
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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
construction industry, sustainability issues, Public Procurement, collaboration, Sweden, construction indusry, sustainability issues, Public Procurement, collaboration, Sweden
in
The Public Procurement Law Review
volume
26
issue
5
pages
16 pages
publisher
Sweet & Maxwell
ISSN
0963-8245
project
Samverkan och hållbarhetshänsyn i bygginköpsprocessen
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
d5c06a4c-2702-4360-b69d-710e62d9df03
date added to LUP
2017-08-16 10:42:50
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:33:54
@article{d5c06a4c-2702-4360-b69d-710e62d9df03,
  abstract     = {{The possibility to integrate sustainability considerations in the public procurement process has been debated over recent decades, resulting in several legislative changes. Collaboration between public and private sectors is emphasised as important in the development of sustainable public procurement but few studies focus on public-private collaboration related to sustainable public procurement. This article contributes to this area of research through an empirical case study of the integration of social and environmental considerations in Swedish public procurement of construction work. A pilot project to enable employment of youth in a construction project is used as a case study. An analysis is conducted of the institutional incentives that exist regarding sustainability considerations, both from the perspective of the public sector actor (the procuring authority) and the private sector actor (the contractor). A model of institutional incentives is developed that broadens the concept of incentives for use beyond merely regulative incentives or financial or contractual incentives. The findings show that regulative incentives have been subordinated other types of institutional incentives in sustainable public procurement practice. The complexity of institutional incentives is important to highlight in order to understand sustainable public procurement in practice, and what factors may contribute as well as hinder the decision-making processes related to sustainability objectives.}},
  author       = {{Wedin Hansson, Lina and Johansson, Susanna}},
  issn         = {{0963-8245}},
  keywords     = {{construction industry; sustainability issues; Public Procurement; collaboration; Sweden; construction indusry; sustainability issues; Public Procurement; collaboration; Sweden}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{5}},
  pages        = {{220--235}},
  publisher    = {{Sweet & Maxwell}},
  series       = {{The Public Procurement Law Review}},
  title        = {{Institutional Incentives for Sustainable Public Procurement : a Case Study of Sustainability Considerations in the Swedish Construction Sector}},
  volume       = {{26}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}