“…For one, the literature using the term "remunicipalization" seems at odds with the literature on motives for (reverse) privatization, which describes reasons for shifting services back to in-house delivery as more pragmatic than ideological (Albalate and Bel 2019;Bel and Warner 2008;Chong, Saussier, and Silverman 2015;Demuth, Friederiszick, and Reinhold 2019;Gradus, Dijkgraaf, and Wassenaar 2014;Gradus, Schoute, and Budding 2019;Warner 2007, 2019;Pérez-López, Prior, and Zafra-Gómez 2015;Warner 2008;Warner and Aldag 2019;Warner and Bel 2008;Warner and Hefetz 2012). It also contradicts the literature on corporatization, which shows that local governments in many countries are increasingly placing public service delivery at arm's length (Andrews et al 2019;Bergh et al 2018;Ferry et al 2018;Grossi and Reichard 2008;Tavares 2017;Tavares andCamões 2007, 2010;Van Genugten, Van Thiel, and Voorn 2019;Voorn, Van Genugten, and Van Thiel 2017;Voorn, Van Thiel, and Van Genugten 2018). To which extent can the claim be corroborated that remunicipalization is motivated by a rejection of businesslike local public service delivery?…”