Agency Coordination of Private Action

K. Schulz
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

This Article explores the previously overlooked role of relational contracting in forming and maintaining public-private partnerships. Relational contracting generally describes firms using formal but legally non-binding agreements to collaborate on shared objectives. Why do parties invest in forming elaborate contracts that they do not—and cannot—enforce in court? Contract theory suggests that the very act of contracting is relationship-building; it generates commitment, trust, cooperation, a win-win philosophy, and strengthened communication. Writing down goals and intentions allows parties to clarify expectations while maintaining flexibility for unforeseen conditions. This Article demonstrates that agencies also use relational contracting— creating unenforceable written agreements to build relationships with external actors. To shed light on agencies’ use of relational contracting, this Article provides a novel review of the recovery planning process required by the Endangered Species Act. A surprising finding emerges: private groups are providing crucial resources and logistical support to prevent the extinction of endangered species. Tribes, states, nongovernmental organizations, and sportsmen’s groups are providing necessary resources to further agency action. By orchestrating private action through recovery planning documents, the agency can garner the resources necessary to undertake species translocations, which it could not unilaterally facilitate. Although the plans are not judicially enforceable, they nevertheless play a coordinating and commitment-generating role in facilitating private actors to engage in recovery efforts. This example highlights the broader trend of relational contracting building and formalizing relationships between agency and non-agency actors. Environmental impact statements, forest management plans, and recovery plans for endangered species are all examples of such “relational contracts” governing inter-agency and private-public collaborations. Viewed in this light, seemingly prosaic planning documents are, in fact, a crucial component in facilitating many agency collaborations. Descriptively, this account adds institutional detail to literatures on new governance and public-private partnerships. Normatively, it raises questions about whether the benefits of contracting offsets the potential distributional inequities and mechanisms to shroud government actions created by the practice.
私人行动的机构协调
本文探讨了以前被忽视的关系契约在形成和维持公私伙伴关系中的作用。关系型合同通常描述公司使用正式但不具法律约束力的协议为共同目标进行合作。为什么当事人要投资于制定详尽的合同,而他们不能也不能在法庭上强制执行?契约理论认为,契约行为本身就是建立关系;它带来了承诺、信任、合作、共赢理念,并加强了沟通。写下目标和意图可以让双方澄清期望,同时保持对不可预见情况的灵活性。这篇文章表明,机构也使用关系合同——创建不可强制执行的书面协议来建立与外部行为者的关系。为了阐明机构对关系合同的使用,本文对《濒危物种法》所要求的恢复计划过程进行了新的审查。一个令人惊讶的发现出现了:私人团体正在提供关键的资源和后勤支持,以防止濒危物种的灭绝。部落、各州、非政府组织和运动员团体正在为机构进一步行动提供必要的资源。通过通过恢复计划文件协调私人行动,该机构可以获得进行物种迁移所需的资源,这是它无法单方面促进的。虽然这些计划不能在司法上强制执行,但它们在促进私营部门参与恢复工作方面发挥了协调和促成承诺的作用。这个例子突出了在代理和非代理行为体之间建立关系契约和形式化关系的更广泛趋势。环境影响报告、森林管理计划和濒危物种恢复计划都是这种管理机构间和公私合作的“关系合同”的例子。从这个角度来看,看似平淡无奇的规划文件实际上是促进许多机构合作的关键组成部分。描述性地说,这一描述为关于新治理和公私伙伴关系的文献增加了制度细节。从规范上讲,它提出了这样的问题:契约的好处是否抵消了潜在的分配不平等,以及掩盖这种做法所造成的政府行为的机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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