skip to content
 

Gemma Burgess and Daniel Durrant's paper has been published in Social Policy and Society.

Reciprocity in the Co-Production of Public Services: The Role of Volunteering through Community Time Exchange?

This article, co-authored by Gemma Burgess, has been published in Social Policy and Society.

Time Credits are a form of community currency based upon the reciprocal exchange of time and represent an interpretation of ‘time banking’ by a UK social enterprise, Spice. This article sets out the contribution made by research on Time Credits to the theory and practice of co-production in public services. Time Credits are intended to improve wellbeing through volunteering and ultimately increase economic participation. There is a focus on communities exhibiting high levels of deprivation within a small Cambridgeshire town (Wisbech, UK) which is geographically isolated and characterised by low-skilled, agri-food based employment opportunities that attracted high levels of inward migration from the A8 EU accession countries. In separating the rhetoric from the reality of co-production, the research aims to shed some light upon the extent to which such initiatives can realistically engender a shift towards a more reciprocal economy in the context of an ongoing programme of fiscal austerity.

Burgess, G., & Durrant, D. (2018). Reciprocity in the Co-Production of Public Services: The Role of Volunteering through Community Time Exchange? Social Policy and Society, 1-16. doi:10.1017/S1474746418000076

Author

Gemma Burgess

Daniel Durrant

Publication Date

March 2018

CCHPR Logo