From private choice to public trust: A new social basis for welfare
- 1 October 1996
- journal article
- developments
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Public Money and Management
- Vol. 16 (4), 51-57
- https://doi.org/10.1080/09540969609387945
Abstract
Consumer choice is an inadequate mechanism for empowering public service users. People want to feel confidence in services which are intended to meet their welfare needs. But it is no longer possible or acceptable to conceive of such confidence as based in unquestioning trust of service professionals. If it is to be effective in creating positive relationships between public services and their users; trust must be reciprocal. This article suggests how reciprocal relationships of trust can be built and sustained between welfare services and the citizens who use and pay for them, at both individual and collective levels.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Innovation in Democratic Practice in Local GovernmentPolicy & Politics, 1996
- Spoilt for choice? How consumerism can disempower public service usersPublic Money and Management, 1995
- Public Services and Market MechanismsPublished by Bloomsbury Academic ,1995
- Quasi-Markets and Social PolicyThe Economic Journal, 1991
- Discursive DemocracyPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1990
- Feminism and Modern Friendship: Dislocating the CommunityEthics, 1989
- Economic Action and Social Structure: The Problem of EmbeddednessAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1985