Title:
1Green Awassa Policy and Governance Issues
- Christopher Koliba, Ph.D.
- University of Vermont
- June 20, 2006
2Some assumptions
- That we will enter into a strategic alliance to
address a commonly defined problem - We will need to identify certain policy tools
to focus on - We will need to work within existing networks or
perhaps create a new network - We will need to build on existing knowledge and
experience
3Importance of Multi-Sector Alignment and
Collaboration
4Vertical Horizontal Relations Across Sectors
and Levels
5- What organizations are represented here?
- Who is not here, that needs to be?
6Network Development
- Factions Coalitions
- Networking vs. networks
- Network characteristics
- Creating a community of practice
7(No Transcript)
8Each actors relationship to a program may be
characterized along three dimensions
- What is the direction of his preference on the
matter at issue? - Is he for or against?
- What is the intensity of preference?
- Does he care a lot about it, or is he
relatively indifferent? - What resources can he bring to bear to affect the
outcome? - Is he weak or strong?
- Pressman and Wildavsky p.116-117
9Each actors relationship to a program may be
characterized along three dimensions
- What is the direction of his preference on the
matter at issue? - Is he for or against?
- What is the intensity of preference?
- Does he care a lot about it, or is he
relatively indifferent? - What resources can he bring to bear to affect the
outcome? - Is he weak or strong?
- Pressman and Wildavsky p.116-117
10Network structures working differently and
changing expectations
- Networking is a common term that refers to
people making connections with each other by
going to meetings and conferences, as well as
through the use of communication technology such
as email and Web discussion groups (Alter and
Hage 1993 Considine 2001). P.364 - Networks occur when links among a number of
organizations or individuals become formalized
p.364 - A network structure forms when these people
realize they (and the organization they
represent) are only one small piece of the total
picture. P.364
11Characteristic of the most effective networks
- They are integrated (preferably centralized)
- They enjoy direct rather than fragmented fiscal
control - They are most likely in an environment where
resources are plentiful - They are most likely under conditions of
stability. P.7-8
12Snyder, Wenger and Briggs Communities of
practice in government
- Many of our most urgent social problems call
for flexible arrangements, constant adaptation,
and the savvy blending of expertise and
credibility that requires crossing the boundaries
of organizations, sectors, and governance
levels p.1
13Setting an Agenda
- Three streams
- Problem
- Lack of cooking fuel
- Deforestation
- Contaminated lakes
- Policy (solutions)
- Land use regulation
- Efficient stoves
- Reforestation
- Politics
14Actors play different roles
- Problems stream
- Define the problem, its severity, raise its
visibility - Policies stream
- Advocate for certain policy solutions
- Implement policy solutions
- Politics stream
- Look to manipulate systems to align problems with
policies
15Partial Couplings
- Solutions to problems, but without a receptive
political climate - Politics to proposals, but without a sense that
a compelling problem is being solved - Politics and problems both calling for action,
but without an available alternative to
advocate. (Kingdon P.110)
16Rational Approach to Policy Making
- Step one Verify, Define, and Detail the
Problem - Step two Establish Evaluation Criteria
- Step three Identify Alternative Policies
- Step four Evaluate Alternative Policies
- Step five Display and Select among
Alternative Policies - Step six Monitor Policy Outcomes
- Patton and Sawicki, 1986, p. 26
17Policy Windows opportunities to align the streams
- Events news items
- Government initiatives
- Media focus
- Funding opportunities
- This Atelier?
18Definitions of Policy Tools and/or Instruments
- Policy tool A method through which government
seeks a policy objective. Birkland P.163 - Policy tools by one means or another, overtly
or subtly designed to cause people to do things,
refrain from doing things or continue doing
things that they would otherwise not do.
Birkland P.163
19Examples of policy tools
- Laws and regulations
- Direct provision of services or goods
- Contracting out
- Transfer payments
- Vouchers
- Intergovernmental grants
- General expenditures
- Government spending (for government operations)
- Market and proprietary operations
- Tax system (Tax credits)
- Loans and loan guarantees subsidies
- Insurance
- Public Information
- Inducements and sanctions
- Capacity-building efforts
- Learning tools
- Informal procedures
20Tools structure action.
- Programs can embody entire suites of tools.
Salamon P. 19-20 - Tools of public action rarely appear in pure
form. Rather, they come bundled in particular
programs, many of which combine more than one
tool, and all of which bring different approaches
to the design issues that each program must
address. Salamon P.21
21Tools can mobilize and support networks
22Vertical Collaboration Activities
- Information seeking
- General funding of programs and projects
- New funding of programs and projects
- Interpretation of standards and rules
- General program guidance
- Technical assistance
- Adjustment seeking
- Regulatory relief, flexibility or waiver
- Statutory relief or flexibility
- Change in policy
- Funding innovation for program
- Model program involvement
- Performance-based discretion (Agronoff and
McGuire 2003)
23Horizontal Collaborative Activities
- Policymaking and strategy making
- Gain policymaking assistance
- Engage in formal partnerships
- Engage in joint policymaking
- Consolidate policy effort
- Resource exchange
- Seek financial resources
- Employ joint financial incentives
- Contracted planning and implementation
- Project-based work
- Partnership for a particular project
- Seek technical resources
- Agronoff and McGuire, 2003 p.70-71
24Social Capital Theory
- Social Networks
- Open
- Closed
- Trust
- Collective Norms
25Begs some questions regarding governance
- Principal Agent problems
- Compliance
- Legitimacy
- Implementation failure
26Principle-agent problem
- The more dispersed the authority, therefore, and
the less the coincidence of interests and
perspectives between principals and agents, the
greater the risk of goal displacement and
principal-agent differences Where principals
and agents lack a shared set of values or
worldviews, the task of ensuring that the
principals objectives are being served grow more
complex and more problematic. Salamon, P.32
27Strategies employed to gain compliance
- Coercive (People are forced by the threat of
penalties.) - Remunerative(People are attracted by the promise
of rewards such as money, career advancement,
good grades, better working conditions, political
advantage, enhanced social standing, and having
psychological needs met.) - Normative(People are compelled because they
believe what they are doing is right and good
and/or because they find involvement
intrinsically satisfying.) - (Sergiovanni 1995 50 paraphrasing Etzioni
1961)
28Rules Legitimacy
- Legitimacy binds rule-follower to rule-maker
Legitimacy is in some sense the political
scientists equivalent of the economists
invisible hand we know it exists as a force that
holds societies together, but we cannot give very
satisfactory explanations of how to create it or
why it is sometimes very strong and sometimes
seems to disappear. Stone P.285
29Implementation Failure
- Chain of implementation Number of points to
clearance - Citizen and community dependencies resistance
30The Relevance of the Chain of Causality
- The longer the chain of causality, the more
numerous the reciprocal relationships among the
links and the more complex implementation
becomes. Pressman and Wildavsky, 1973, p.xxiv
31 Pressman and Wildavsky, p. 107
32Relation between Professions and Community /
Clients and Citizens (p. 106)
Professions Clients
Communities Citizens
Time
33Some core concepts
- The professional co-optation of community p. 12
- The capacity of people and their communities to
solve their own problems p. 16 - Iatrogenic effects p. 20
34Strategic alliances in action
- Strategic alliances are groups of
organizationsnonprofits, for-profit and
publicvoluntarily working together to solve
problems that are too large for any one
organizations to solve on its own. P.1 - Strategic alliances as voluntary. P.1
- Review of lit.
- Alliances move through several phases as they
develop and evolve - Alliances are initiated to meet a variety of
needs - The operation of alliances requires certain
organizational structures and processes and - A variety of factors influence the progress of
alliances. P.1
35Phases of Alliance Development
- Initiation phase
- Role of a champion. P.2
- ComplementarityOrganizations often decide to
partner not because they have the same needs, but
because they have complementary needs and
assets. P.2 - Compatible goals. P.6
36- Operations phase
- An alliance between two or more organizations,
in essence, becomes an organization itself during
the operations phase. P.2 - Importance of an accountability plan. P.3
- Leaders in alliances assume several role
architects, information brokers, boundary
spanners. P.3
37Governance structuresformal vs. informal
- We observed that more complex alliances-- those
with several players, tasks and objectivestended
to rely on more formalized structures, whereas
simpler alliances were often more comfortable
with informal processes p.7 - Importance of communication mechanismsp.8
- Leaders the broker monitored information flow
within the partnership, created ways to enhance
information distribution, and ensured that
relevant information found its way to appropriate
individuals and work teams. P.8 - Relationship between evaluation and
accountability. P.9
38(No Transcript)
39Types of Citizenship (Adapted from Barber, 1984)
Power