000 02970nam a22002537a 4500
999 _c5683
_d5683
005 20250625151442.0
008 171122s2017 -nz||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aAFVC
100 _aCook, Len
_97180
245 _aImproving the effectiveness of social services :
_bthe challenge for public administration
_cLen Cook, Families Commissioner
260 _aWellington, New Zealand :
_bSuperu,
_c2017
300 _aelectronic document (27 pages) ; PDF file
500 _aPresented at the Family & Relationship Services Australia conference; “Measuring Success in the Family & Relationship Services Sector”, Canberra, 1 December 2016. Revised 13 September 2017.
520 _a"Social services involve interactions with people that can be fraught and complex, are often based on partial knowledge of conditions, and may involve many partners and inadequate responses. The quality of social services delivery is a vital and undervalued consideration in the selection of social policy choices. A series of recent reviews not only repeat what is now well known about the low standard and underuse of well accepted evaluation methods but also point to systemic underuse of basic management practices including continuous improvement and operations research. Politicians encourage citizens to have an idealised view of what is achievable and this discourages the public sector from evaluation, continuous improvement and review that might suggest otherwise. Free and frank advice is generally seen as referring to policy, but this paper suggests that until operational practices are subject to more open review and challenge, that improvements in policy analysis and design will be hampered by delivery failings. The social investment approach is based on embedding in public administration practices which recognise the breadth of evidence that could be drawn on to provide an objective basis for citizens to have confidence in service delivery, and a constructive basis for come-at-ability. Alignment of processes in the social services necessitates greater co-ordination within agencies as well as between them. Where public services are activities of last resort, such as child protection and incarceration, we need to be open about the likelihood of having only a limited ability to effect change, with sufficient independent oversight to ensure that system inadequacies cannot damage people more when they are vulnerable." (Author's abstract). Record #5683
650 5 _9102
_aCHANGE MANAGEMENT
650 0 _96552
_aEVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE
650 5 _aORGANISATIONAL SYSTEMS
_9416
650 5 _aSOCIAL POLICY
_9551
650 4 _aSOCIAL SERVICES
_9555
651 4 _aNEW ZEALAND
_92588
856 _uhttps://superublogsite.files.wordpress.com/2017/10/challenges-for-social-services-final.pdf
856 _uhttps://nzfamiliescommissioner.com/2017/10/19/improving-the-effectiveness-of-social-services/
_yFamilies Commissioner blog
942 _2ddc
_cBRIEFING