J 2025

Cross-sectoral collaboration in times of crisis: Comparing the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Poland

PLAČEK, Michal; Vladislav VALENTIVON; Gabriela DANIEL; František OCHRANA; Pawel MIKOLAJCZAK et al.

Basic information

Original name

Cross-sectoral collaboration in times of crisis: Comparing the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Poland

Authors

PLAČEK, Michal; Vladislav VALENTIVON; Gabriela DANIEL; František OCHRANA; Pawel MIKOLAJCZAK and Anna WALIGORA

Edition

Public Administration, Hradec Králové, Magnaninitas, 2025, 0033-3298

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Field of Study

50602 Public administration

Country of publisher

United States of America

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

Impact factor

Impact factor: 5.100 in 2024

Marked to be transferred to RIV

Yes

Organization unit

Ambis University

EID Scopus

Keywords in English

HISTORICAL INSTITUTIONALISM;GOVERNMENT;NONPROFITS;PRIVATE

Tags

Tags

International impact, Reviewed

Links

GF23-04324L, research and development project.
Changed: 5/3/2026 12:39, Ing. Kateřina Lendrová

Abstract

In the original language

The Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Poland, with their shared political histories, have confronted the compounded challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic and the Ukraine war. These difficulties spurred the emergence of public-nonprofit collaboration in all three countries, each taking distinct paths. Our study aims to unravel these divergent trajectories of public-nonprofit collaboration through the lens of historical institutionalism. Using this lens, we attribute this divergence to the influence of the broader institutional environment, whose evolution has followed distinct trajectories in the examined countries. To achieve our objectives, we employed single-country case study methods, leveraging desk research and structured interviews with management informants from nonprofit organizations in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Poland (37 respondents in total). Our study demonstrates that the perceptions of the institutional environment by nonprofit actors directly shape the effectiveness of collaborations between the public sector and nonprofit organizations. Contrary to Western expectations, our findingsmchallenge the seemingly prevailing optimism regarding the outcomes of public-nonprofit collaboration and emphasize the influence of factors such as path dependency, mutual distrust, and prior negative experiences.