Paper Type

Complete

Abstract

Differences among municipalities (in size, location etc.) impact equal access to welfare services, making inter-municipal collaboration crucial. This study examines a digital transformation initiative between a smaller and a larger municipality, analyzing how institutional entrepreneurs (IEs) ensure equitable collaboration. Based on thematic analysis of 53 structured interviews, findings show that IEs drive equitable DT by emphasizing complementary strengths, a shared vision, and mutual benefits. Unlike previous research suggesting collaboration is most intensive early on, our study highlights the ongoing importance of discourse and shared framing. While financial concerns emerged, strong national support and a commitment to equal welfare mitigated risks. Over time, IEs shifted from assertive leadership to shared responsibility, fostering long-term collaboration and sustainability. This research contributes to IS literature by providing empirical insights into IEs and inter-organizational collaboration in public sector, offering valuable guidance for policymakers and practitioners implementing similar initiatives.

Paper Number

1912

Author Connect URL

https://authorconnect.aisnet.org/conferences/AMCIS2025/papers/1912

Comments

IntelFuture

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Aug 15th, 12:00 AM

Making the Little Brother Matter as Much as the Big One: Ensuring Equitable Partnership in Inter-municipal Collaboration for Digital Transformation

Differences among municipalities (in size, location etc.) impact equal access to welfare services, making inter-municipal collaboration crucial. This study examines a digital transformation initiative between a smaller and a larger municipality, analyzing how institutional entrepreneurs (IEs) ensure equitable collaboration. Based on thematic analysis of 53 structured interviews, findings show that IEs drive equitable DT by emphasizing complementary strengths, a shared vision, and mutual benefits. Unlike previous research suggesting collaboration is most intensive early on, our study highlights the ongoing importance of discourse and shared framing. While financial concerns emerged, strong national support and a commitment to equal welfare mitigated risks. Over time, IEs shifted from assertive leadership to shared responsibility, fostering long-term collaboration and sustainability. This research contributes to IS literature by providing empirical insights into IEs and inter-organizational collaboration in public sector, offering valuable guidance for policymakers and practitioners implementing similar initiatives.

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