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Administrative Burden Analysis×Co-Production Assessment×
DomainePublic AdministrationPublic Administration
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine20151996
Auteur d'origineDonald Moynihan, Pamela Herd & Hope HarveyElinor Ostrom
TypeCost-typology policy analysisService-relationship assessment framework
Source fondatriceMoynihan, D., Herd, P., & Harvey, H. (2015). Administrative Burden: Learning, Psychological, and Compliance Costs in Citizen-State Interactions. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, 25(1), 43–69. DOI ↗Ostrom, E. (1996). Crossing the Great Divide: Coproduction, Synergy, and Development. World Development, 24(6), 1073–1087. DOI ↗
AliasAdministrative Burden Assessment, Learning Psychological and Compliance Cost Analysis, Citizen-State Burden AnalysisCoproduction Analysis, Citizen Co-Production Assessment, Service Co-Production Evaluation
Apparentées44
RésuméAdministrative burden analysis examines the costs that individuals experience when they interact with the state to claim benefits, comply with obligations or access public services. Articulated by Donald Moynihan, Pamela Herd and Hope Harvey in their influential 2015 article, the framework decomposes these costs into three types: learning costs of finding out about and understanding a program, psychological costs of stress and stigma, and compliance costs of the time, paperwork and effort required to participate. The central claim is that burdens are consequential — they suppress program take-up and access — and that they are often the product of political choices rather than mere administrative accident. The analysis makes these hidden costs visible and traces who bears them.Co-production assessment analyses how public services are produced jointly by professional providers and the citizens, clients or communities who use them, rather than delivered to passive recipients. The concept was developed by Elinor Ostrom and colleagues and sharpened in her 1996 article, which argued that the inputs of "regular producers" such as teachers, police or doctors and those of citizen "co-producers" are often complementary, so that neither can produce the service well alone. The framework assesses what citizens contribute, how their inputs combine with professional inputs, and the conditions under which this combination creates synergy. Its purpose is to identify and strengthen the joint production at the heart of many public services.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Administrative Burden Analysis · Co-Production Assessment. Consulté le 2026-06-25 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare