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Institutionalized social skill and the rise of mediating organizations in urban governance: the case of the Cleveland Housing Network
Authors:Michael McQuarrie  Norman Krumholz
Affiliation:1. University of California, Davis, Sociology , One Shields Ave., Davis, 95616, USA mmcquarrie@ucdavis.edu;3. Cleveland State University, Urban Studies , 2121 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, 44115, USA
Abstract:In this paper we build on an expanding literature that attempts to understand the changing organizational and institutional dimensions of contemporary urban governance. We do so by utilizing the Cleveland Housing Network as a lens through which salient characteristics of contemporary governance become visible. Doing so enables us to highlight the distinctive challenges of the multi-institutional nature of contemporary governance arrangements and “heterarchic” governance in particular. These challenges situate mediating organizations as central components of governance arrangements. Finally, by focusing on the distinctive characteristics of the organization's leaders, we demonstrate that mediating organizations are usefully thought of as institutionalized forms of the “social skill” of institutional entrepreneurs.
Keywords:development  low-income housing  nonprofit sector  policy
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