%0 Journal Article %T The evolution of public每private partnership in Ireland: a sustainable pathway? %A Gail Sheppard %A Matthias Beck %J International Review of Administrative Sciences %@ 1461-7226 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/0020852316641494 %X Ireland is a latecomer to public每private partnerships, having only adopted them in 1998. Prior to the credit crisis, Ireland followed the UK model, with public每private partnerships being implemented in transport, education, housing/urban regeneration and water/wastewater. Having stalled during the credit crisis, public每private partnerships have recently been reactivated with the domestic infrastructure stimulus programme. The focus of this article is on Ireland as a younger participant in public每private partnerships and the nexus between adoption patterns and the sustainability characteristics of Irish public每private partnerships. Using document analysis and exploratory interviews, the article examines the reasons for Ireland's interest in public每private partnerships, which cannot be attributed to economic rationales alone. We consider three explanations: voluntary adoption 每 where the UK model was closely followed as part of a domestic modernisation agenda; coercive adoption 每 where public每private partnership policy was forced upon public sector organisations; and institutional isomorphism 每 where institutional creation and change around public每private partnerships were promoted to help public sector organisations gain institutional legitimacy. We find evidence of all three patterns, with coercive adoption becoming more relevant in recent years, which is likely to adversely affect sustainability unless incentives for voluntary adoption are strengthened and institutional capacity building is boosted. There are many reasons why public sector organisations procure via public每private partnerships, and motivations can change over time. In Ireland, public每private partnership adoption changed from being largely voluntary to increasingly coercive. Irrespective of motives, public每private partnership procurement must be underpinned by incentives and institutional enabling mechanisms, which should be strengthened to make Ireland's public每private partnership strategy sustainable %K commercial sensitivity %K isomorphism %K New Public Management %K policy transfer %K public每private partnership %K transparency %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0020852316641494