Australian Government - click here to go to our home page

go to start   text resizing

Australian Public Service Commission
Management Advisory Committee - click to go to the MAC home page

related resources

on our site

news

Home page
> Management Advisory Committee > Connecting Government > Abstracts
> Connected Government website
‹ Previous page

Last updated: 20 April 2004

Connecting Government: Whole of government responses to Australia's priority challenges

25 key abstracts from the 'Connecting Government' literature search and review

Leat, D. Seltzer, K. & Stocker, G., (2002), Towards Holistic Governance: The New Reform Agenda, Government Beyond, The Centre Series, Palgrave, Basingstoke

This is a UK-focused analysis of joined-up government initiatives, combined with a normative agenda: "True holistic government emerges where government agencies and their partners share reinforcing objectives and can identify shared commitment to a range of mutually supportive tools to achieve that objective." The article draws on academic literature in social relations, and looks at the co-existence of multiple forms of organisational frameworks (e.g. hierarchy, community, individualism) in contemporary social systems. It applies the theoretical framework to nine local UK case studies and also draws some comparisons with international cases (NZ, Australia, Canada, USA). Furthermore it acknowledges the arguments against holism in government (e.g. over-ambitious, risks unintended and uncontrolled consequences), but suggests holistic government is necessary and often rewarded with success. It includes extended discussions on finance and budgetary implications, the impact of holistic approaches on accountability, and the use of IT as an enabler.

Key conclusions

Aucoin, P., (2002), Beyond the 'new' in Public Management Reform in Canada: Catching the Next Wave, The Handbook of Canadian Public Administration, edited by Dunn, P. OUP, pp. 37-52

This chapters main theme is that although new public management has successfully put emphasis on increasing the efficiency of the public service, it is only one aspect of good governance. Public servants also need to develop knowledge on addressing public policy issues, especially 'wicked problems' confronting contemporary government.

A major victim of reform has been "policy capacity", due to the reduced role of the state (competition, de regulation, privatisation). Ministers want the public service to concentrate more on economics and efficiency, and where research and analyses is needed it is sourced from outside the public service. There has been a move towards public servants managing the policy process rather than doing it. New Public Management fragmented the capacity of the government to address wicked problems that spill over portfolio boundaries. Acknowledging the need for improved policy capacity means recognising the importance of engaging the external research community in policy research. Policy ideas will need to be subject to the broadest range of critical review.

In Canada there has been increasing emphasis on considering customers or clients as citizens, which goes beyond good private sector practices, as citizens have rights. Citizen centred service means that attention must be paid to critical legal, rights and due process issues.

This chapter also addressed the issue of leadership. The public service is now in an era where it no longer monopolises either public services delivery or policy advice. The dynamics of leadership and accountability has changed especially where services/policy are contracted out or in partnership arrangements. Public service leaders must be responsive to the political climate and foster a public service culture that appreciates the intimate connections with the public. The public service needs to be managed as a corporate resource. 

Auditor General of Canada, (2002,) Modernising Accountability in the Public Sector, Report to the House of Commons, December 2002

Some characteristics of the modern Canadian public sector challenge traditional notions of accountability, including a focus on results, increased flexibility of managers, and the use of partnering arrangements to deliver government services. This report by the Canadian Auditor-General examines the impact of these factors on the Canadian government's ability to establish effective accountability practices. It also proposes the following definition of accountability, with the aim of enabling modern developments in public management and governance to be more adequately incorporated into the accountability arrangements of the government:

Accountability is a relationship based on obligations to demonstrate, review and take responsibility for performance, both the results achieved in light of agreed expectations and the means used.

The report also outlines five principles of effective accountability that should be applied appropriately to suit individual accountability relationships and practices. The principles involve: ensuring clear roles and responsibilities; clear performance expectations; a balance of expectations with capacities; credible reporting; and reasonable review of performance. The report advises that strong application of these principles will shift the accountability process away from the practice of laying blame, and result in more effective and robust mechanisms for scrutinising and improving the performance of those involved in the activities of government.

The report also proposes that the effectiveness of accountability processes could be strengthened if parliament played a more active role in examining government performance expectations against actual performance achievements.

Bardach, E., (1998), Getting Agencies to Work Together: The Practice and Theory of Managerial Craftsmanship, Brookings Institution Press, Washington, D.C.

This study of "managerial craftsmanship" in theory and practice. The analysis focuses on innovative approaches to interagency cooperation between US state and local government agencies. These are examined under the rubric of "interagency collaborative capacity" (ICC)-an agency's ability to engage in collaborative activity. ICC has an objective and a subjective component. The former encompasses formal agreements at the executive level; personnel, budgetary, equipment, and space resources assigned to collaborative tasks; delegation and accountability relationships that pertain to those tasks; the various administrative services that support all this collaborative work. The latter includes the relevant individuals expectations of others availability for, and competency at, performing particular collaborative tasks.

"Interagency collaborative capacities differ from more conventional organisational capacities mainly by virtue of their component parts having thicker boundaries and more powerful sources of environmental influence than average." (p. 21)

Key conclusions

"Craftsmanship thinking" and "craftsmanship activity" in the public sector management context requires:

Barrett, P., (2003), Governance and joined-up government - Some issues and early successes, Paper to the Australian Council of Auditors-General, Melbourne (June).

(Available from www.anao.gov.au)

The author, the Commonwealth Auditor-General, looks at the major issues surrounding the implementation of 'joined-up government' initiatives in the Federal context. He examines the associated implications for Australian governance and provides detailed descriptions of some 'joined-up' successes so far. In discussing the workings of these 'cross-agency governance arrangements' he explores both what has been happening and the effect on the government, the Australian Public Service, and service delivery to clients and citizens. Through auditing he also analyses the wider ramifications of these developments, chiefly in accountability. The author explores at length the three main models for effective joined-up or connected government:

Key conclusions

Cabinet Office [Her Majesty's Treasury], (2001), Wiring It Up - A Progress report to the Prime Minister, A Performance and Innovation Unit report,

(Available at http://www.cabinet-office.gov.uk/servicefirst/2001/joinedup/govstratju.htm)

This is a twelve-month follow up progress report on the recommendations of the 'Wiring It Up' report and includes:

Comptroller and Auditor General [UK], (2001), Joining up to Improve Public Services, National Audit Office, London

(Available at www.nao.gov.uk/publications/nao_reports/01-02/0102383.pdf)

This paper examines the recent "joint working" or "joined up" government developments in the United Kingdom, with special emphasis given to the central leadership and coordinating role of the Cabinet Office and the Treasury. The report follows up the Modernising Government White Paper (March 1999) and examines the delivery of integrated or seamless services through the "joining up" of public sector efforts across departments. Part 1 of the report contains, concise definitions and charts relating to "joint working".  Part 2 assesses the impact of five "joint working" initiatives aimed at improving public services for three client groups-rough sleepers, pre-school children, and small to medium sized businesses (the Rough Sleepers Unit, Early Years Development and Childcare Partnerships, Sure Start, Business Link partnerships, and British Trade International).  Part 3 utilises relevant fieldwork and research to highlight good practice likely to support successful joint working

Key conclusions:

The five key requirements for successful "joint working" are outlined and four National Audit Office reports relevant to improving "joint working" practice are listed

Di Francesco, M., (2001), Process not Outcomes in New Public management? Policy Coherence in Australian Government, The Drawing Board: An Australian Review of Public Affairs, 1 (3), pp. 103-16.

The increasing inability of the public sector to deliver coherent policy is a result of New Public Management reforms, as the focus on managing for outcomes has not resulted in the intended outcome of coherent policy development. This has occurred because of the effects of incorporating business management practices and market mechanisms into the public sector which has undercut the value of bureaucratic policy advice relative to that sourced from political advisors. The 'hollowing out' thesis / rise of the contract state reduces government leverage over public policy because of escalating fragmentation and loss of expertise. This article aims to assess this situation by examining the more traditional focus of achieving policy coherence, through coordination as a process, rather than an outcome.

Policy coherence is both a political imperative (the threat of appearing inconsistent in the electorate) and an economic imperative (the need to conserve scarce public resources). The decline of policy coherence is seen to be an ideologically driven move to replace the bureaucracy with the market. The article examines whether policy coherence is about controlling process or outcomes and whether control is the same as coordination.

Edwards, M., (2003), Participatory Governance, Canberra Bulletin of Public Administration, vol 107, March, pp. 1-6

The author defines 'governance' as 'how an organisation steers itself and the processes and structures used to achieve its goals', which includes the ways in which organisations relate to each other, and their clients/customers. 'Participatory governance' is defined as 'structures and arrangements which support effective relationships across the public, private and community sectors as they collaborate in decision-making processes towards agreed objectives'. This is seen as essential, since governments cannot remain as firmly in control of the policy decision-making process as they have in the past and, at the same time, move towards a more facilitative or enabling role. The author identifies the key governance challenge for the public sector as one of dealing with stakeholders and citizens outside of government in the interests of more effective decision-making and sound policy. The article explains the context for discussion of participatory governance; analyses the main (and changing) policy development framework; sets out the accountability implications of reform; outlines the major challenges for the respective sectors; and suggests directions for future collaboration.

Key conclusions

Langford, J. and Edwards, M., (2002), Boundary Spanning and Public Sector Reform in Australia and Canada, Optimum Online: The Journal of Public Sector Management, vol. 32, no. 4

(Available from http://www.optimumonline.ca>

This article summarises the proceedings of a 2002 symposium entitled 'New Players, Partners and Processes: A Public Sector Without Boundaries?' The gathering was co-sponsored by the National Institute for Governance, University of Canberra and the Centre for Public Sector Studies, School of Public Administration, University of Victoria, Canada. The proceedings, edited by the authors and published under the same title (Canberra and Victoria, NIG and CPSS, 2002), includes papers by Mark Considine, Rod Dobell, David Good, John Langford, Evert Lindquist, Alison McClelland, Jenny Stewart and Kath Wellman on four important boundary-spanning activities in Australia and Canada:

Important issues to emerge at the symposium included:

Key conclusions

Hopkins, M., Couture, C., and Moore, E., (2001), Moving from Heroic to the everyday: Lessons learned From Leading Horizontal Projects, CCMD Roundtable on the Management of Horizontal Initiatives, chaired by James Lahey, Canadian Centre for Management Development, Canada

(Available at http://www.ccmd-ccg.gc.ca/Research/publications/pdfs/horinz_rt_e.pdf)

This paper uses literature, case studies, and public servant expertise to explore the management of horizontal initiatives /projects. This type of management is considered central to good governance because it is effective, it uses up to date technology; and its values match expectations of current generations.

However it is not a science, it is an art and one which is not always relevant. It is also prone to problems for example: 'group think', requiring large investments of time, and can become disconnected to vertical accountability. The report features four reoccurring themes, which are the need to reinvent leadership, the need to build on a foundation of trust and culture, the need to manage changing needs and the need to maintain vertical contact.

There are four chapters:

  1. Mobilising teams and networks - including sharing leadership, investing in teamwork, developing a shared culture, building trust.
  2. Developing a shared framework - including defining shared goals and results, addressing the accountability conundrum.
  3. Developing supportive structures - including selecting a supportive structure, matching structure to task, and matching structure to life cycle stage.
  4. Maintaining momentum - this chapter generally moves beyond the scope of the Whole of government report. Includes leadership and momentum, identifying a champion, building on small successes, managing transitions, ensuring continuous learning.

The appendix contains an accountability checklist and a table of horizontal coordination mechanisms used by the Canadian government.

IPAA [Institute of Public Administration Australia], (2002) Working together - integrated governance, IPAA National Research Project undertaken by Success Works, Brisbane.

Breaking down the barriers to integrated outcomes is 'slowly occurring'. There are working examples of integrated governance; but there is 'some level of frustration in undertaking an integrated approach within the existing governmental structure'. This project analyses seven case studies using integrated governance which fall into four categories:

The key findings are:

  1. Integration can be divided into four categories (or three if service delivery integration subsumes integration around partnership agreements)
  2. Each level of integration is hindered by the level above it
  3. Bureaucratic barriers are the most prominent
  4. There are common success factors, including political commitment and flexible funding
  5. Leadership is critical
  6. A lead agency or individual must have prime responsibility
  7. Integrated governance is hard and resource-intensive - its use should be selectively.

Kettl, D. F., (2002) The Transformation of Governance: Public Administration for Twenty-First Century America, The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore

The chief aims of this book are to examine the historical traditions of US public administration, to identify the current challenges facing it, and to chart the tensions between what it has to do and its capacity to do it. The top-down model of bureaucratic accountability which dominated US public administration until the end of World War II has been increasingly challenged over the past half-century by "bottom-up accountability", greater citizen participation in service provision and "inside-out accountability", notably, the "reinventing government" movement. Although there are advanced theories about government, those concerning the relationship between government and the nongovernmental partners who play a critical role in executing government policy, are underdeveloped. The gap between traditional understanding of government and governance has thus widened. Resolving these challenges is the second major aim of this book. Ten basic strategies are offered for building a new approach to the field, more particularly, for better reconciling theory and practice. Central to this dilemma is the emerging gap between government and governance. The former refers to "the structure and function of public institutions" and the latter to "the way government gets its job done."

Key conclusions

Ten principles are proposed for bridging the government-governance divide:

  1. Hierarchy and authority cannot and will not be replaced, but they must be fitted better to the transformation of governance
  2. Complex networks have been layered on top of hierarchical organisations, and they must be managed differently
  3. Public managers need to rely more on interpersonal and interorganisational processes as complements to-and sometimes as substitutes for-authority
  4. Information is the most basic and necessary component for the transformation of governance.
  5. Performance management can provide a valuable tool for spanning fuzzy boundaries
  6. Transparency is the foundation for trust and confidence in government operations
  7. Government needs to invest in human capital so that the skills of its workers match the jobs they must perform
  8. The transformation of governance requires new strategies and tactics for popular participation in public administration
  9. Civic responsibility has become the job of government's nongovernmental partners
  10. Americans need to devise new constitutional strategies for the management of conflict.

Lindquist, E., (2000), Reconceiving the Centre: Leadership, Strategic Review and Coherence in Public Sector Reform, Government of the Future, OECD, Paris, pp. 149-183.

After two decades of public sector reform, the governments of OECD member countries continue to display varying degrees of commitment to change. Rather than being mainly proactive, they remain predominantly reactive to the demands of technological innovation, freer trading regimes, alternative governance arrangements, interest groups, and budget and debt pressures. Nor have the central tasks of restoring and maintaining the confidence of citizens in political and administrative leaders yet been adequately addressed. The paper sets out a conceptual framework designed to assist public servants in assessing and comparing experiences within and between their respective jurisdictions. The author aims also to establish a basis for further empirical study, chiefly concerning the role of central agencies. He postulates the existence of three levels of public sector reform-Comprehensive, Selective, and Ad Hoc. Also explored are two major types of governance systems (Type I, centralised, Type II, more devolved), and the ways in which there appears to be convergence between these systems due to external pressures on governments. He also examines how challenges for strategic review might differ at various stages of the reform cycle (for example, developing blueprints, implementation, and consolidation). The author's conclusions relate strongly to his observations of the Canadian experience, though there is a marked flavour of broader administrative theory.

Key conclusions:

Ling, T., (2002), Delivering Joined Up Government in the UK: Dimensions, Issues and Problems, Public Administration, Volume 80 Issue 4 - Winter, pp 615 -642

The Blair government's "Third Way" reform is in its second term. The first term made 'joined up government' a central feature and saw it as a way of 'modernising government'. In the second term it is more muted and is seen as a way of focusing on 'delivery' and 'quality services'. Joined up government had a variety of different meanings and there was little guidance from central government, resulting in a more fluid and contestable situation than what might be expected.

Ling briefly traces the major developments in the organisation of public services between the 1940's and the 1990's. There is also a snapshot of international examples of joined up government (including Australia, Canada, Netherlands, New Zealand, Sweden, USA).

Ling investigates four dimensions of what has been termed joined up government:

Although this could be viewed as wholesale public sector change there is little evidence of this. Ling summarises thirty reviews/guides that have been published since 1997 to over come the barriers of joined up government, most of which contradict each other. This calls for agreement and coordination from the centre. The other major theme of agreement is the need for a change of public service culture and skills.

Matheson, C., (2000), Policy Formation in the Australian Government: Vertical and Horizontal Axes, Australian Journal of Public Administration, Vol 59, No 2 pp. 44-55

The article explores the vertical and horizontal 'axes' of public policy-making at the federal level. The former is marked by hierarchical relationships, while bargaining, negotiation and persuasion characterise the relationships of the latter. Vertical axes permit governments to take and enforce technically rational decisions as they pursue consistent goals. Horizontal axes allow governments to make broadly-based decisions based on group assent and electoral support. In recent years, vertical axes have grown stronger, bringing with them increased technical rationality and consistency. The concomitant cost has been a narrowing of the scope of political debate and a notable decline in electoral support for government. In essence, 'within central government, increased centralisation and the decline of departmentalism have strengthened the vertical axis at the expense of the horizontal one.'

Although the presence of both axes is widely recognised, their respective roles in the policy process have not been examined in detail. The article seeks to do so by locating the sources of each axis; by identifying the processes or means by which they enable policies to be formulated; and by ascertaining their effect upon policy outcomes. The author concentrates on the formulation of policy rather than on its implementation or evaluation.

Key conclusions

Mulgan, R., (2002), Accountability issues in the new model of governance, Discussion Paper No 91, Graduate Program in Public Policy, ANU Canberra.

This report looks at a trend of governments and their agencies no longer delivering services even though they remain the main purchasers of certain essential services. Governments increasingly rely on private sector providers from either the for-profit commercial sector or the non-profit "community" sector. This approach is part of the global movement of public sector reform. Reasons for the change are discussed as well as the relatively recent popularity of two key words in the title of this paper, "accountability" and "governance". The paper looks at the meaning of "accountability" compared to previously used words such as "responsibility", "scrutiny", "questioning", and "sanctions". "Accountability is a situational concept in that it needs to be specified in context: who is accountable to whom and for what. The report also looks at the meaning of "governance" making the point that "governance" does appear to have one significant advantage over "government" in that it can include non-government institutions in the enterprise of governing.

Key conclusions

Accountability is compared between the three relevant sectors - public, private and non-profit.

The paper also looks at 'to whom' outsourced contractors and their staff are accountable and the significantly altered range of matters for which providers are now accountable (the 'for what'). Regarding this issue, the following conclusions were drawn:

New Zealand Government, (2001) Report of the Advisory Group on the Review of the Center, Presented to the Ministers of State Services and Finance, 69 pages.

(Available from http://www.ssc.govt.nz)

This publication reports on the outcome of a wide-ranging review of New Zealand's state sector conducted over a four-month period in 2001. The Group comprised Public Service chief executives, external commentators and a Public Service Association representative. The chief finding was that, although New Zealand's public management system provides a solid platform for the future, it must meet more effectively the needs of Ministers and citizens. Specifically, the report proposes improvements in three areas:

Progress following the Review of the Centre is reviewed regularly in reports appearing on the State Services Commission website (above). These reports are valuable for charting developments. Good recent examples are Getting Better Results (May 2003) and Integrated Service Delivery (July 2003). The State Services Commission has been behind the establishment of cross-agency 'circuit-breaker' teams to resolve especially difficult problems by combining knowledge at the front-line with central technical support.

OECD, (2003), The E-government Imperative, Paris.

This OECD report emphasises that the public sector needs to change the way in which it works if the maximum benefits from e-government are to be achieved. Government agencies will need to work together and coordinate e-government initiatives to enable services to transcend government structures thus achieving greater productivity gains and efficiencies.

The report identified a number of barriers and challenges regarding the process, including the difficulties in:

It identifies ten guiding principles for successful e-government:

  1. integration of e-government with broader reform policies and programs, as e-government is an enabler and not an end in itself;
  2. a customer focus that emphasises access;
  3. offer customers choice;
  4. ensure privacy protection;
  5. citizen engagement to encourage participation and improve government policies, programs and services;
  6. inter-agency collaboration, cooperation and common frameworks that support interoperability, enhance efficiencies and reduce duplication;
  7. financing models that treat ICT spending as an investment where appropriate and provides stability for ICT spending;
  8. leadership and commitment at all levels of government to maintain momentum and manage change;
  9. appropriate accountability frameworks; and
  10. monitoring and evaluation of e-government initiatives.

Peters, G., (1998), Managing Horizontal Government - The Politics of Coordination, Canadian Centre for Management Development, Canada

This paper delves deeply into aspects of coordination in the public sector, specifically defining coordination, outlining the why and how, discussion of the major issues exposed by coordination efforts and lessons for the 'would be coordinator'. The report is based on interviews with senior public servants from Canada, Britain and Australia.

Barriers to effective departmental coordination have been an ongoing issue for the public sector. Much of the failure is at the policy level, as opposed to the management or implementation level. These problems have been intensified by factors that characterise the modern public service, (such as the existence of a multiplicity of autonomous agencies, the conduct of activities based on private sector models, decentralisation and the increasing tendency for issues dealt with across departments to be interrelated). Coorodination is a prominent issue at the moment because there is less public money available to meet demands. At the same time the public are demanding lower taxes and greater accountability of public expenditure. Reducing expenditure is the most fundamental reason for coordination efforts. However tighter budgets also produce a tendency for departments to focus in on core functions rather than collaborative efforts.

This article analyses issues relating to coordination among public sector organisations such as whether coordination should be imposed or bargained for by political leaders and senior management. The processes used could be hierarchical, based on market forces or alternatively on networks. Each has its place and purpose and the article explores a range of 'how to' structures such as central government processes, inter departmental / inter ministerial structures and coordination efforts from the bottom up.

Key conclusions

Learnings for the 'would be ' coordinator:

Podger, A., (2002), Whole of Government innovations and Challenges, Keynote Address to 'Innovations and Impacts' seminar, IPAA National Conference, Adelaide, 16 November

This paper outlines how 'integrated' or 'joined-up' government or whole-of-government collaboration is receiving international attention. It notes that "joined-up" government can be beneficial, but there are costs and tradeoffs, and its use should be selective.

The idea of integration in Australia is not new, as the Prime Minister's Office of 1911 attests. Centrelink, delivering integrated services to numerous Commonwealth and State agencies, is a recent manifestation that can be traced back to the RCAGA in 1976. Integration is not value-free, yet governments of all persuasions have embraced it.

The main current drivers and demands are globalisation, budgetary pressures, community expectations, and technology. Technology is both creating expectations and providing the means, so it is especially important.

Possible lessons and challenges

Queensland Government, (2002), Community Engagement: leading and facilitating an integrated multi-level initiative, Submission to the CAPAM International Innovation Awards, 2001 - 2002

This report outlines how the Queensland Government aims to enhance citizen engagement with government, through changes to governance and whole-of-government improvements and by making government more accessible to the community (particularly to socially and economically disadvantaged groups). Cross government CEO committees were responsible for advising Cabinet on the whole-of -government strategy, and how it could be integrated to foster community involvement with the policy development and implementation processes. The initiative involves strong political commitment and central agency leadership across government.

The initiative entails a multi-level approach to involving citizens with the central institutions of government by:

State Services Commission. (1999) Integrated Service Delivery, Occasional Paper No. 12, Wellington, New Zealand, 42 pages

(Available from http://www.ssc.govt.nz)

The paper sets out a method for making decisions regarding the integration of government service delivery, for instance, into a 'one-stop shop'. An integration spectrum ranging from high integration to high specialisation is included. Also included is an evaluation matrix with criteria for evaluating alternative arrangements. The purpose of the project described in this article was to provide a means of determining when integration of government service delivery becomes worthwhile. The project revealed that a high degree of integration makes sense when:

The usefulness of this methodology was confirmed in an initial test-case as applied to the formation of the Department of Work and Income (WINZ). Its success has led to a decision by the State Services Commission (SSC) to employ the method in future to guide thinking on integration decisions relating to service delivery, both in terms of the optimal and desirable degree of integration and the relevant criteria that may be applied in this context. This report also offers guidance on more general contracting issues and other elements of organisational design.

The paper outlines preconditions to be met and criteria to be applied in evaluating integration options. The appendixes are especially instructive. The proposed process is summarised in Appendix 1. The second appendix sets out a spectrum of integration options and criteria for consideration. Appendix 3 provides valuable guidance on the factors to be taken into account when assessing the benefits of alternative contractual arrangements. The fourth appendix examines international examples of the various integration options. Appendix 5 explores the ways in which the framework was utilised to establish the WINZ.

Key conclusions:

Two principal conclusions are articulated in the paper:

Sullivan, H. and Skelcher, C., (2002), Working Across Boundaries: Collaboration in Public Services, Palgrave Macmillian, Baskingstoke

Public policy throughout the world is now developed collaboratively, across government, private, community sectors. Globally, partnership is the new language of public governance. A web of interpersonal relationships which arise through networking often supports the formality of partnership, providing the context to mediate questions of power, trust and motivation, which are central to collaboration. Collaboration is both formal and informal and involves both horizontal and vertical forms of inter organisational engagement.

The authors pose four questions for this book:

This book argues that the collaborative agenda for the public purpose has been both under theorised and over looked. Essentially the experience of Britain over the last two decades are used. Chapter two examines the process of 'hollowing out' which fragmented the organisational structure of government and shows how the collaborative institutions re integrated the state in new ways and especially by tying business, voluntary and community organisations to partnership bodies. Chapter three examines that relevant theoretical perspectives for collaboration - organisational sociology, political science and new institutional theory. Chapter four and five examine the imperatives for collaboration in cross cutting issues. Chapter six and seven examine the factors that inhibit collaboration, including an individual skills and resources, organisational culture and the structural feature that support sustainable relationships. This is developed by looking at the differences over the life cycle of a collaborative relationship. Chapter eight explores the question of partnership governance. Chapter nine follows through with the role of citizens in accountability arrangements for partnerships. Chapter ten looks at the issues surrounding evaluation of whether collaboration actually works.

Weller, P., Bakvis, H. and Rhodes, R., (eds) (1997), The Hollow Crown: Countervailing trends in Core executives, Transforming Government, ESCR Whitehall Programme, Macmillan Press, Britain.

Centralised governments are becoming less cohesive and influential. There is less capacity for government to control a range of activities because of privatisation, corporatisation, contracting out, internationalisation of business. Market forces may determine conditions over which governments formally had authority. There is also more pressure from discrete but powerful policy communities. The state is not necessarily being eroded by outside forces but 'hollowing out' from its core, executive government.

This book addresses two key challenges in examining the role of executive government:

  1. What are the institutional forces which shape the executive's capacity to develop strategic coherence across government?
  2. How do similar systems of government executives across five nations compare on key issues

The chapters deal with the following issues:

Key conclusions: