Innovation is often articulated as a panacea for addressing social and economic problems in the modern world. The concept of innovation in any field is seen as capable of driving and catalysing significant changes and transformations. However, the models of innovation in public services that are posed both have often drawn from private sector experience in an undifferentiated way and have not taken into account the distinctive characteristics of public rather than private services.
In public services, innovation has long since taken on multiple meanings with an emphasis on the transformations and innovation required in the management, delivery, and governance of public services. Governments need to innovate their institutions, systems, and processes to balance the dimensions of sustainable development and to manage change. They need to rethink how they support coherent policy frameworks and institutional arrangements and how they make decisions by engaging all stakeholders.
Further, in innovation and change in public services, particular attention is increasingly being paid to sustainability, which has become a value and guide for public institutions, especially during the pandemic and post-pandemic years. This includes both the need for sustainable public services and for sustainable communities and a sustainable environment.
The PUBSIC conference series is committed to supporting and profiling research on public service innovation (PSI) that addresses this need.
Previous PUBSIC Conferences have now taken place in Shanghai, Budapest, Lillehammer, Milan, and Stavanger.
The 2024 conference in Venice will respond to the tectonic changes that public services have experienced over the last three years as a result of the CoVid-19 pandemic. It will explore:
- What innovative approaches to public service delivery have evolved in responding to this pandemic?
- What new forms of public services are evolving as we move out of the pandemic?
- What has changed in the approach to innovation in both the governance and management of public services?
- How we can ensure that such public services are sustainable for the future?
- Salvatore Russo, Ca' Foscari University of Venice
Co-chairs
- Stephen P. Osborne, University of Edinburgh
Co-chairs
- Kerry Brown, Edith Cowan University
- Maria Cucciniello, Bocconi University
- Lars Fulsgang, Roskilde University
- Ricardo Gomes, FGV - Sao Paolo
- Ian Hodgkinson, Loughborough University
- Yijia Jing, Fudan University
- Jill Merethe Loga, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences
- Gyorgy Hajnal, Corvinus University - Budapest
- Wendy Hardyman, Cardiff University
- Toshihiko Ishihara, Kwansei Gakuin University
- Chiara Mio, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice
- Rui Mu, Dalian University of Technology
- Jari Stenvall, University of Tampere
- Piet Tonurist, OECD Observatory of Public Sector Innovation
- Jacob Trischler, Karlstad University
Call for papers
Initial paper submission should take the form of a 500 word abstract that emphasises the contribution of the paper to understanding and developing PSI (see below for panel proposals). We would welcome in particular paper submissions on the following themes, though other papers relevant to the conference theme are welcome:
- PSI for sustainable and resilient public services
- Lessons for PSI and for public service delivery from the CoVid-19 pandemic
- The impact of digital technology and AI on PSI and on public services
- Value creation, co-production and PSI
- Designing and co-designing innovative PSIs
- The governance, management, and contingencies of public service innovation
- The contribution of the non-profit and third sector to PSI
- Collaboration and open innovation
- Social enterprise, social entrepreneurship, and PSI
- Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and public services
- Evaluating Models of PSI
- Human resources issues and perspectives on PSI
- Political dimensions of PSI, and innovation in public policy/public policy processes
- The ‘dark side’ of PSI
- Public – private partnerships and PSI
- The governance of risk in PSI.
Papers can be empirical or conceptual/theoretical in nature. Systematic literature reviews are welcome – if they advance theory and/or knowledge rather than simply describe it. Submissions are welcome from both experienced and new/doctoral.
Panel submissions are also welcome. These should include 3 or 4 papers plus a Panel Chair. The proposal should specify the focus and contribution of the Panel, as well as a short outline of the papers to be presented (with author and chair details). Panel proposals may be a maximum of 1,000 words in length.
Abstract submission process
Abstracts should be submitted direct to pubsic2024@unive.it by 30th October 2023.
They will be reviewed by the International Scientific Committee and decisions notified to authors by 8th November 2023, at the latest.
Final papers and presentations should be sent to pubsic2024@unive.it by 11th January 2024.
Registration and fees
The online registration is now avaible.
Early-bird
- Expired on 10th December 2023
Standard
- Registration: until 10th January 2024
- Payment: you will receive an e-mail with the amount and link to use. Registrations from 15th December 2023 will receive the payment link by 8-10th January 2024, for technical and administrative reasons. Once the link has been received, it is advisable to make the payment immediately:
- registration payment 320 €
- additional social dinner (optional) 50 €; for accompanying person 66 €