Government departments urged to practise what they preach on ‘joined-up’ action
Many national and local initiatives to regenerate disadvantaged communities and tackle wider social exclusion are still a long way from the goal of genuine partnerships and multi-agency working. And central government should set a better example by making its own departments and agencies more ‘joined-up’, according to research for the Joseph Rowntree Foundation.
The study, by Prof. Alan McGregor and colleagues at the University of Glasgow highlights a series of barriers at national and local level that stand in the way of more integrated working between area regeneration programmes and wider initiatives, such as ‘welfare to work’ schemes that target individuals.
Local Strategic Partnerships (LSPs) in England, Community Planning Partnerships (CPPs) in Scotland and Community Strategy Partnerships (CSPs) in Wales have been introduced to bring greater coherence to efforts to promote social inclusion. But the report, based on nine case study areas in the UK, identifies a series of other, practical steps that could be taken to promote joint working.
National action
The report suggests that:
- Government could become more ‘joined-up’ at the centre. In particular, departments could rationalise their differing performance monitoring and auditing requirements that place unnecessary burdens on local partnerships.
- National initiatives could allow greater discretion to those responsible for delivering front-line services to adapt to local circumstances and priorities. Increased local flexibility announced in this year’s Budget for the Jobcentre Plus programme is a move in this direction.
- Departments and initiatives could set joint targets for promoting social inclusion and make organisations jointly responsible for meeting them.
- Skills needed for joint working could be given priority in training and development programmes for staff and made a key component in performance appraisal systems.
- A requirement for all new, area-based initiatives to provide integrated services could be applied to the full set of government social inclusion interventions, including employment programmes.
Prof. McGregor said: “National government has a key role to play in developing more effective joint working by requiring its own departments to work together more closely in a transparent way. But the greatest contribution it could probably make would be to stop the introduction of new initiatives and its constant tinkering with the rules for existing programmes, so that local organisations and local staff working for national agencies have the time to build stable working relationships with each other.”
Local action
The report suggests that:
Prof. McGregor said: “Successful joint working is difficult enough given the complexity of social exclusion in many areas, variations in targets and timescales and the different organisational cultures that exist. Most partnerships also place significant demands on staff time in their member organisations.
“That makes it all the more vital that local energies are not diluted or dispersed by excessive demands imposed by government from above or by needless misunderstandings or duplication of effort at the local level.”
He added: “Our fieldwork in nine different areas of the UK uncovered many positive examples of operational integration between agencies that were prepared to share information, premises, staff and even their clients. But the barriers to joined-up working remain formidable and there is much that still needs to be done to overcome them.”
Note to Editors
Developing people – regenerating place: Achieving greater integration for
local area regeneration by Alan McGregor, Andrea Glass, Kevin Higgins, Lynne
Macdougall and Victoria Sutherland is published for the Joseph Rowntree
Foundation by The Policy Press and available from Marston Book Services, PO Box
269, Abingdon, Oxon. OX14 4YN (01235 465500) price £11.95 plus £2.75 p&p.
A summary of findings is available free of charge here.
Fieldwork for the research was carried out in autumn 2001 in Birmingham, Brighton, Glasgow, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Middlesbrough, Nottingham and the London Borough of Southwark.
For further information contact:
Prof. Alan McGregor (author) 0141-330 5128
Issued by David Utting, Associate Director (Public Affairs) 020-7278 9665 / david.utting@jrf.org.uk


