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New models of service delivery and the potential of colocation of services in the NGO sector in Christchurch Laura Johnstone

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: University of Canterbury, 2013 Christchurch, N.Z. : Description: electronic document (55 p.); PDF file: 3.29 MBOther title:
  • In: UC - MSD Summer Scholarship Report for Ministry of Social Development, February 2013 (pp.281-339)
Subject(s): Online resources: Summary: This research project was conducted for the Ministry of Social Development and inquires into new models of service delivery in the non-governmental organization (NGO) sector in the Canterbury region, which for the purpose of this report includes central Christchurch, North Canterbury, Selwyn District and Mid Canterbury. This report takes into account the relevance of the post-earthquake setting. Specific attention is given to the potential for co-location and community hubs. The research provides key guiding principles and recommendations, which support effective collaborative efforts and highlight the cost implications for accommodation sharing. A hard copy of the paper is available. The guiding principles from this research are published in Te Awtea Review, v11(1) - access via Read summary link. See also "Incentivising effective NGO collaboration: literature review and post-disaster practice" (#5124 - available online). Record #4410
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Notes Barcode
Report Report Vine library TRO 361.37 JOH Available FV16080059
Access online Access online Vine library Online Available Summary article ON14050104

This research project was conducted for the Ministry of Social Development and inquires into new models of service delivery in the non-governmental organization (NGO) sector in the
Canterbury region, which for the purpose of this report includes central Christchurch, North Canterbury, Selwyn District and Mid Canterbury. This report takes into account the relevance of
the post-earthquake setting. Specific attention is given to the potential for co-location and community hubs. The research provides key guiding principles and recommendations, which support effective collaborative efforts and highlight the cost implications for accommodation sharing. A hard copy of the paper is available. The guiding principles from this research are published in Te Awtea Review, v11(1) - access via Read summary link. See also "Incentivising effective NGO collaboration: literature review and post-disaster practice" (#5124 - available online). Record #4410