Building bureaucracies that adapt to complexity
Chair
Emma Proud – Head of Learning and Adapting, Brink
Speakers
Ena Fernandez – OIC Director, Philippines House of Representatives
Sam Sharp – Research Officer, ODI
Stacey Young – Agency Knowledge Management and Organizational Learning Officer, USAID
Toby Lowe – Visiting Professor, Centre for Public Impact
Yuen Yuen Ang – Professor, University of Michigan
Are bureaucracies today fit for purpose to address what are often complex and multidimensional challenges on housing, education, pandemics, international development and beyond?
Public servants and experts alike are increasingly questioning the wisdom of mainstream approaches embodied in new public management, arguing that tackling complex challenges calls for different ways of working. Public organisations need to be able to learn from and adapt to rapidly shifting and uncertain environments, and work iteratively to refine policies. Covid-19 is a prime example: governments have had to rapidly adapt to keep pace with the unpredictable and emergent nature of the pandemic. But can bureaucracies become less bureaucratic and more adaptive?
Building on emerging evidence from the FCDO-funded LearnAdapt programme, this event explores different efforts to incorporate adaptive approaches within public management. The discussion draws from different experiences across a range of sectors and countries to tease out key insights and lessons that are relevant to those aiming to build more adaptive organisations, in international development or beyond.
Видео Building bureaucracies that adapt to complexity канала ODI
Emma Proud – Head of Learning and Adapting, Brink
Speakers
Ena Fernandez – OIC Director, Philippines House of Representatives
Sam Sharp – Research Officer, ODI
Stacey Young – Agency Knowledge Management and Organizational Learning Officer, USAID
Toby Lowe – Visiting Professor, Centre for Public Impact
Yuen Yuen Ang – Professor, University of Michigan
Are bureaucracies today fit for purpose to address what are often complex and multidimensional challenges on housing, education, pandemics, international development and beyond?
Public servants and experts alike are increasingly questioning the wisdom of mainstream approaches embodied in new public management, arguing that tackling complex challenges calls for different ways of working. Public organisations need to be able to learn from and adapt to rapidly shifting and uncertain environments, and work iteratively to refine policies. Covid-19 is a prime example: governments have had to rapidly adapt to keep pace with the unpredictable and emergent nature of the pandemic. But can bureaucracies become less bureaucratic and more adaptive?
Building on emerging evidence from the FCDO-funded LearnAdapt programme, this event explores different efforts to incorporate adaptive approaches within public management. The discussion draws from different experiences across a range of sectors and countries to tease out key insights and lessons that are relevant to those aiming to build more adaptive organisations, in international development or beyond.
Видео Building bureaucracies that adapt to complexity канала ODI
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
Strengthening youth livelihoods and enterprise innovation in Africa’s digital eraLakshmi Sundaram - Leave no girls behind: post-2015 and the empowerment of girlsMeeting the global demand for food assistance - panelThe Principled Aid Index 2020Duncan Green - Book launch: Aid on the Edge of ChaosSky News - Typhoon devastationLeaving no one behind: keynote speech by Lilianne Ploumen and panel debateThe politics of growth: transformative ideas in economics - Q&ACarols Scartascini - CAPE 2013: The practice of budgetingEconomic transformation: a new approach to inclusive growthImproving local governance and service delivery - Q & AWorld Disasters Report 2015 - Panel DiscussionChallenging neo protectionism effectively navigating new green trade measures and avoiding a greenGoverning extractives at the local level - PanelDoing development differently: what does it look like?Dominic McVey on the future of overseas aid (Sky News)Disaster risk reduction in action live Nepal case study - Q&AMass starvation: tackling the political causes of famineODI's Shelagh Whitley on BBC World News 22/09/2014Financing and operations of multilateral development banks: a clients' perspective