Contracts and effective Inter-Organizational Collaboration: The case of the Galápagos Wind partnership
通过加拉帕戈斯风电伙伴关系案例,研究合同安排质量如何影响组织间协作,为设计有效的可持续发展伙伴关系提供参考。
• The conditions that facilitate collaboration within global partnerships for sustainable development remain widely debated. • We examine how the quality of contractual and governance arrangements between partners influences inter-organizational collaboration. • We investigate the practical case of the Galápagos Wind Partnership on the island of San Cristóbal in Ecuador. • In the partnership, the specificity of contractual arrangements helped define objectives, responsibilities, risk allocation, and expectations. • The findings can inform the design of future initiatives and support their effectiveness in advancing the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Over the past three decades, the establishment of partnerships between public and non-state actors has become a leading mechanism of inter-organizational collaboration for sustainable development. The presence of productive collaboration inside a partnership, as well as a partnership’s ability to influence collaboration and institutions outside the immediate partners, are usually considered important pathways to partnership effectiveness. The conditions which facilitate or undermine such collaboration, however, are still widely debated. In this article, we draw on the literature on institutional and partnerships effectiveness to explore how the institutional design of a partnership, and more specifically the quality of its contractual arrangements, may influence the ability of the partners to come together, articulate partnership goals, gain access to additional sources of financing, and manage reputational risks and gains. We do so through a case study of the Galápagos San Cristóbal Wind Project partnership, which was established in 2003 to reduce the Galápagos Islands’ dependence on imported fossil fuels, while simultaneously protecting the region’s fragile marine ecosystem from the risk of oil spills and contributing toward the transition to cleaner energy sources. Overall, we find that the high quality of contracting used in the partnership, including the supporting role of domestic legislation, was instrumental in shaping the effectiveness of the project activities and also served as a catalyst to facilitate adaptability and the credible commitment of resources by the partners. While we note the importance of considering contextual factors and conditions before applying our findings to other types of more informal collaborative relationships, we argue that the theoretical focus on contractual arrangements emphasized in our article is likely to remain important for understanding the effectiveness of global partnerships for sustainable development.