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Published byTiina Toivonen Modified over 5 years ago
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Building Collaborative Places: Infrastructure for System Change
“The system is broken. We aren’t solving the big issues” - Voluntary Action Organisation
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Find at collaboratecic.com
The focus of the talk is this report – the reason for writing and why we think it is increasingly relevant to places thinking about system change, particularly for those at the hard edge of society.
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Building Collaborative Places – the story
Why are we talking about the “boring bit” of system change? Building Collaborative Places Where to next? Some visuals of collaboration in here
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The Jargon (!) System change: understanding and addressing the root causes of a problem and acknowledging the interdependent parts that are producing their own pattern of behaviours and outcomes An intentional process to influence components and structures – many of which you may have originally viewed as sitting outside the ‘system’ Behaving like a system: collaborating to enable the collective resource of the system to be deployed to address common challenges & change outcomes Place-based working: addresses the unique needs of people in a specific location. It is a citizen-centred approach that emphasises collaboration and shared resources. This is what WY-FI is all about…?
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Why are we talking about collaboration and system change?
1. A new politics of ‘permanent austerity’? 2. Welfare – shifting away from the state 3. Identity crisis? 4. Demand is rising (and getting more complex) If this is the current state of play then what is our response?
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The operating context is critical … and changing
60,000 + people in England experience multiple and complex needs
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And so is the way we work… It’s not about services
And so is the way we work… It’s not about services. It’s about challenges and responses in a place Even Beveridge admitted it wasn’t about the services
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What’s the Plan? Understand ‘place’ and look at the systems you can
The new context – austerity, rising demand, complex needs, fragmented services, org/outcome problem… + The new ‘giants’ – (e.g.) housing, jobs, DV, loneliness, mental health, social isolation, poor aspiration…? The new imperatives – prevention & EA, inclusive growth and thriving places... _ A void – a national vision too narrow, too tactical, not ambitious enough… so can we fill the gap in our cities and places? = What’s the Plan? Understand ‘place’ and look at the systems you can influence… Even Beveridge admitted it wasn’t about the services
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But why ‘place based system change’?
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Because complex social problems have a place-based dimension…
Education, crime, employment, social links …
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…and so do their solutions
Place Insight Networks Public investment & services Engagement Influence Political leadership Assets
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And because the causes of social problems are complex and interrelated… They cannot be solved by any one organisation acting alone...
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We need to build collaborative places
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A collaborative place model
Re-cast public services as part of a local system, one which includes many actors that can influence outcomes Mobilise the collective power of the system to address a common cause Use public money to invest in, build & influence the system Image with thanks to Immy Kaur and Indy Johar, Dark Matter Labs
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But how do we do it?
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Behaviours: How you plan to do systems change Vision: The ambition of the system Beneficiary impact over organisiation focus These preconditions are neither linear nor independent: they are adaptive and interdependent as people, relationships and priorities change. Distributed leadership: enabling, fluid, no egos, convening Resilient and risk embracing: safe to fail, able to quickly bounce back. Strengths based: utilising the assets of people and place Citizen centred: from concept to delivery Trusted partners: understand and adapt to each others values Issues are acknowledged as systemic and requiring collaboration Grounded in the place but open to new approaches Able to let go: act as a platform for innovation
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But projects get stuck at the margins of wider systems And small-scale innovations aren’t enough
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To translate new vision & principles into shifts in culture & practice we need to build new, enabling and collaborative infrastructure
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Place-based strategies & plans
A co-produced strategy that sets out the social & economic vision for the place as a shared challenge between partners & citizens Core operating principles for public services The foundation for local collaboration “We need clarity of vision & outcomes to do our bit” – voluntary sector organisation
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Outcomes & accountability
Place-based outcomes representing shared goals The social & economic changes that will be achieved through long-term, systemic collaboration Mutual accountability is based on shared responsibility & reciprocity “The collective responsibility is the same – but all the partners have their own unique role in making it happen” – Police officer
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Funding & commissioning
Place-based funding models & commissioning practice that reflect place-based plans & outcomes and support new forms of collaborative delivery “Place-based funding is a big opportunity if it leads to more flexible commissioning” – voluntary sector organisation
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Culture change & people development
Building capacity to create leaders, organisations, workforce & communities that are ready to work collaboratively Cross-sector approaches to workforce development New role for the frontline “Culture change is the biggest barrier” – council officer
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Data, evidence & evaluation
Collaborative & adaptive learning & evaluation, supported by shared data Provides the foundation for collective understanding into the root causes of need & demand Provides insights about the impact of shared investment decisions “We need shared data to inform commissioning & help us manage demand across the system” – council officer
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Routes to change – building the system
There is no one size fits all... Whole system whole place Prototyping new ways of working at small scale, with a view to building broader system change
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System infrastructure is the hard graft of place-based system change.
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But how do you hold a system to account if you haven’t got the collaborative hardwiring right?
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Shifting from rhetoric to fundamental system change is a collective challenge.
“Leadership is a collective capacity in a system, not just something that individuals do. Leadership is about the capacity of the whole system to sense and actualize the future that wants to emerge” – Otto Scharmer, Theory U
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