Building partnerships: case studies of clientcontractor collaboration in the UK construction industry
- 21 October 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Construction Management and Economics
- Vol. 18 (7) , 819-832
- https://doi.org/10.1080/014461900433104
Abstract
Despite the enormous groundswell of interest in partnering and alliancing in recent years, there has been comparatively little research that has set out to investigate systematically the nature, feasibility, benefits and limitations of forms of client-contractor collaboration. This is despite the growing recognition that conditions conducive to partnering may well vary considerably and that partnering may not be the solution for problems within the industry that many commentators have taken it to be. This paper sets out to add to the growing literature and empirical database on partnering by reporting the findings of a research project designed to explore the economic, organizational and technological factors that encourage or inhibit collaboration in practice. The paper follows on from an earlier review and critique of the literature on partnering (Bresnen, M. and Marshall, N. 2000, Construction Management and Economics, 18 (2) 229-237). It includes as its database nine case studies of medium-to-large-scale projects, selected from across the industry, on which processes of collaboration are examined from the viewpoints of clients, contractors, designers and subcontractors. In contrast to much of the prescriptive work in this area, the analysis of the data and the paper's conclusions stress some of the practical problems, limitations and paradoxes of partnering and alliancing when the effects of important economic, organizational and psychological factors are taken into account.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Motivation, commitment and the use of incentives in partnerships and alliancesConstruction Management and Economics, 2000
- Partnering in construction: a critical review of issues, problems and dilemmasConstruction Management and Economics, 2000
- PEER-REVIEWED PAPER: Partnering ContinuumJournal of Management in Engineering, 1998
- The technocratic totalitarianism of construction process improvement: a critical perspectiveEngineering, Construction and Architectural Management, 1998
- The seven pillars of partnering A guide to second generation partneringPublished by Thomas Telford Ltd. ,1998
- Partnering on construction projects: a study of the relationship between partnering activities and project successIEEE Transactions on Engineering Management, 1997
- An Organizational Perspective on Changing Buyer-Supplier Relations: A Critical Review of the EvidenceOrganization, 1996
- A Dynamic Theory of Organizational Knowledge CreationOrganization Science, 1994
- Construction contracting in theory and practice: A case studyConstruction Management and Economics, 1991
- Studying the client's role in construction managementConstruction Management and Economics, 1984