Title: Working in Partnership
1Working in Partnership
- Professor Peter Lloyd
- Director
- Ecotec Research and Consulting
2Partnerships Colonise the World
- Ecological perspectives that grows which
works (Boulding) - Ways of handling a turbulent and connected world
- globalisation - Ways of handling the complex transaction costs of
inter-connected problems - The expansion of partnership has a real
ecological base (not a fad)
3But Context is Vital
- Member State opportunity structures influence
outcomes - Crowded platforms - struggling for a niche
- Receptive spaces going with the grain and
easily absorbed - Spaces but resistance opportunity but hard to
make the political case at the centre
4Wicked Issues
- BUT wherever it is
- Partnership will only have real political
relevance where it tackles the wicked issues of
the day - The surest ground for it to thrive is where it
can demonstrate real value added
5The IDELE Programme
- Ecotec Commissioned by DG EMPL - 11 seminars over
3 years - (I)dentify, (D)isseminate and (E)xchange good
practice across a series of different topics,
contexts - Over 100 examples of good practice, 250 local
and national policy players in debate - Website reports, fiches, contacts
6The Key Lessons from IDELE
7Partnership Value Added
- Sense gaps better - mould central policy more to
needs tackle some with local strategies - Offer thinking out of the box creative action
- Mobilise commitment and planning and analysis
horsepower - Create new types of service delivery vehicles
8What Makes them Really Work
- Shared vision and clear objectives
- Clear divisions of labour
- Reflexive trust we understand each other and
can work together - Fair distribution of costs, benefits, rewards to
underpin risk-taking - Shared mutual learning over time
9The Partnership Success Checklist
- Good fit right for the mission?
- Focus clear about objectives?
- Space to act the right foothold in the
governance structure? - Capacity/competency right shape, management,
leadership? - Reality check addresses issues where it can
make a difference?
10What Gets in the Way
- Not giving them enough time to grow the trust
they need - Pushing them too soon into delivery and driving
faster change than can be handled - Failing to design sustainable funding to support
them properly - Limiting them to targets set from outside
11Empowerment against Delivery
Empowerment Focus
Local Partnerships
High
Complex Hybrid Forms Mixed Functions
Level 1 (Base Capacity)
Level 2 (Capacity Delivery)
Mature Multi-Purpose Partnerships (Umbrella
Bodies)
Social Economy
Quasi-Public Service Delivery Bodies
Social Enterprises
Low
High
Service Delivery Focus
12Partnerships in Governance
13Multi-faceted Problems
- The more local the level, the more
inter-connected are the problems - National job inclusion policies can look
one-dimensional find them jobs - at central
ministry level - On-the-ground it may be jobs skills education
housing etc - Integrated approach is vital
14Silos and Multi-Level Strategy
- Policy silos not only divide up the connected
elements but often involve different vertical
levels - Can block the beneficial effects even of good
local horizontal partnerships (in spite of) - The question is how can we break out of this?
15Finding a Route to Multi-Level Approaches
- Policy actions can be
- Conceived at different levels
- Managed at different levels
- Implemented at different levels
- So various combinations possible
- Do more locally in each element
- Connect the levels to get the best outcome
16FUNCTIONS AT DIFFERENT LEVELS
Conceived
Managed
Implemented
L
N
N
N
R
L
N
R
R
R
L
R
L
L
L
National
Regional
Local
17The Strongest IDELE Lesson
- Getting partnership right is not easy
- Transaction (hassle) costs can be high
- It can take longer you think to get it right
- It doesnt make for quick delivery
- BUT when it works it can be a powerful engine
for creativity!