New public institutional forms and social innovation in urban governance: Insights from the "mayor's office of new urban mechanics" (MONUM) in Boston

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Abstract

This paper investigates how public sector institutions change their form and approach to achieve a socially innovative urban governance. The "Mayor's Office of New Urban Mechanics" (MONUM) in Boston, Massachusetts (USA) proves a representative case of innovation in the public sector. As a new type of government agency, it is essentially an open innovation lab dedicated to innovative evidence-based policymaking. Following a new dynamic organizational pattern in urban governance, MONUM is conducive to project-oriented social innovation practices and horizontal multi-sectoral collaboration among the three societal sectors: public, private, and civil. Its results suggest that first, the peculiarity of MONUM lies in its hybrid and boundary-blurring nature. Second, new institutional forms that experiment with urban governance can rely on multi-sectoral collaboration. Third, MONUM has experimented with a systemic approach to social innovation following the "design thinking theory. " The MONUM case can contribute to the current debate in Europe on the need to harmonize EU policies for an effective social inclusion by promoting the application of the place-sensitive approach.

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Bevilacqua, C., Ou, Y., Pizzimenti, P., & Minervino, G. (2020). New public institutional forms and social innovation in urban governance: Insights from the “mayor’s office of new urban mechanics” (MONUM) in Boston. Sustainability (Switzerland), 12(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/su12010023

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