The challenges of policy coordination at a programme level: Why joining-up is hard to do
Journal Article
2013
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Development Southern Africa
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Taylor & Francis (Routledge)
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University of Cape Town
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Faculty
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Abstract
This article examines obstacles to policy coordination to promote development at a programme level. Contemporary efforts to promote coordination or ‘joined-up’ working across government entities highlight attempts to promote policy synergy and resource maximisation for achieving objectives that straddle the sector-specific boundaries of multiple departments. This paper assessed efforts to coordinate the actions of multiple departments towards achieving a single cross-cutting policy objective. Programme-level analysis of the Expanded Public Works Programme in South Africa revealed various reasons why joining-up is difficult to negotiate in practice. This consisted of policy goal and operational incompatibility between specialised entities, which appears sensitive to the specificity and stringency of policy goals and implementation regimens; as well as a host of difficulties related to how coordination is formally defined and designated. This included role definition and confusion, as well as the nature and locus of coordination mandates across and within individual departments.
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Reference:
Naidoo, V. (2013). The challenges of policy coordination at a programme level: Why joining-up is hard to do. Development Southern Africa, 30(3), 386-400.