This article discusses the role of the manager in collaborative governance studies. These studies
identify a new managerial role as facilitator of stakeholder collaboration when pursuing public
policy and service innovation. But the complications of role changes are underexplored; hence
this article addresses the emerging challenges. Drawing on organizational discourse studies, it
theorizes and analyzes managers? positioning during collaborative governance practices in cases
from the Danish daycare area. The findings demonstrate how public managers construct old and
new roles related to various public management discourses, and their struggles to change accordingly.
However, the findings also show how managers empower their new role and gain agency to
steer collaborative outcomes. Thereby the article unpacks the challenges of becoming a facilitating
manager alongside other roles: the struggles of identity and agency constitutive to particular ways
of managing, as well as struggles over multiple roles. It suggests paying greater attention to constitutive
aspects of changing roles to understand the managerial challenges and effects implied
through emerging public management discourses.
Author Biography
Mie Plotnikof, Department of Organization, Copenhagen Business School