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Tools to understand the political and policy context & engage with policy makers

Tools to understand the political and policy context & engage with policy makers. Kent Buse, PhD John Young Oxford, November 2006. Overview. What is policy? What explains policy change? What is the relationship between researchers and policy makers?

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Tools to understand the political and policy context & engage with policy makers

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  1. Tools to understand the political and policy context & engage with policy makers Kent Buse, PhD John Young Oxford, November 2006

  2. Overview • What is policy? • What explains policy change? • What is the relationship between researchers and policy makers? • Tools to understand the political context of policy change • Tools to influence the policy process

  3. What is Policy?

  4. Policy – some meanings • Label for field of activity/space • Expression of general intent • Specific proposals • Decisions of government • Formal authority/legislation • Program • Output or outcome • Model or theory Hogwood & Gunn, 1984

  5. According to Peter John - ‘the interplay between institutions, interests and ideas.’ John P (1998) Analysing Public Policy. London: Cassell.

  6. Two types of policy research • Research ‘for’ policy – about policy content (what should be done) and outcomes (policy evaluation) • Research ‘on’ policy – about the policy process (explanatory, usually not evaluative, focuses on ‘how’ and ‘why’ questions)

  7. Research ‘on’ policy ‘Research on policy seeks to understand how the machinery of the state and political actors interact to produce public actions. ...The main tasks … are to explain how policy-making works and to explore the variety and complexity of the decision-making processes.’ (John, 1998, p1)

  8. Walt & Gilson’s framework Context • Situational factors • Structural factors • Cultural factors • Global factors Actors • The state • The market • Civil society Process Content • Objectives & aims • Assumptions • Values • Distributional impact • Why do issues reach the agenda? • Who formulates policy? • How is policy implemented? • What makes policies change?

  9. Political Situation Analysis Systematically gather political intelligence associated with any policy reform on: • Content – the what of policy • Context – the social, cultural, temporal environment in which decisions taken • Process – how decisions are made – the rules of the game – how we do business • Actors – those who affect and are affected by decisions

  10. Bangladesh Case Study • Learn lessons from poor performance to inform 2005-2010 strategy • Proposed Policy • Integration of two wings of ministry responsible for family planning & health services • Substantial body of research supported integration: cost-effectiveness, management, service delivery • Agreed by key health officials and subject of donor conditionality • Context: • Political volatility and partisan confrontation • Limited government ownership of health policy • Superficial analysis identified two loosing groups but did not anticipate opposition – no plan to • Alter costs by offering to change elements of policy • Modify perceptions of costs • Compensate losers • Partial implementation reversed after affected FP managers mobilized many groups • Donors • Confronted deep-rooted interests involved in distributing rents • Strategy relied on ‘sensitizing’ opponents of evidence-based virtues, failed to mobilize potential allies or shift dialogue to new forum, and took ‘non-negotiable’ stance • Suspended disbursements for a few months and then backed down Unanticipated opposition to ‘no-brainer’ reform

  11. Health Policy Reform History • ‘Conventional’ evidence ‘for’ policy necessary but insufficient for change • Policy failure • Losses fall on organized & powerful groups • Gains distributed among marginalize • Analysis of political-economy dimensions of change important determinant of success • Requires more systematic approaches to understanding political dimensions & influencing change

  12. Policy content Substance which details its constituent parts: • Aims and strategies of the policy • Empirical basis of the policy (evidence) • Underlying values and paradigms • Technical content (evidence informed) • Administrative feasibility of the policy

  13. Policy Consequences Distribution of benefits and costs in terms of: • Stakeholders • Scale • Characteristics • Intensity • Timing, etc

  14. Actors/Stakeholders • Individuals or groups with interest in the issue • Some role in making or implementing decision • Affected by policy decision • Specific to each policy reform and context • Stakeholder analysis • Identify stakeholder groups • Looking for independent groups/individuals with some influence or potential influence • Break down categories as far as feasible

  15. Bangladesh Integration Example: • Ministry of Finance • Planning Commission • Prime Minister • Minister of Health • Secretary of Min of Health • Deputy Secretary Ministry of Health • Health reformers in Ministry • Cadre of Family Planning Officials • Medical Association • Donors • Press • Academics • Select service delivery NGOs

  16. Tangible Votes Finance Infrastructure Members Intangible Expertise Charisma Legitimacy Access to media & decision makers Assessing Stakeholder Power: Political Assets:

  17. Interests, Position & Commitment • Interests – what would a stakeholder gain or lose from the proposed reform? • Interests determine position: supportive, neutral, opposed • Commitment – importance attached by stakeholder to issue

  18. Position Map

  19. Bangladesh Integration: Pre-2001

  20. Positions Oct 2001-May 2003

  21. Policy process • Agenda setting – why some issues considered by policy makers • Formulation – which policy alternatives and evidence is considered, why evidence ignored • Adoption – who is involved in deciding, formal or informal decision-making • Implementation – who will implement, how will implementers change policy to suit their aims, are implementers involved in decision-making • Evaluation – whether and why policies achieve their aims The way policy is initiated, developed, negotiated, communicated, implemented

  22. Policy context • Situational: change of leadership, focusing events, new evidence, etc. • Structural: resource allocation to intervention, organization of service delivery – public private mix, etc. • Cultural: prevailing attitudes to situation of women, technology, equity, tradition, etc. • International: place of intervention on international agenda, aid dependency, levels and modalities, migration of staff, ideas and paradigms, etc. Systemic factors which effect policy

  23. Political Context Analysis • Systematically gather political intelligence associated with any policy reform • Contextual opportunities & constraints • Formal & informal processes through which decisions made • Identify stakeholder groups • Assess political resources of groups • Understand interests, positions and commitments of groups • Systematically assess political palatability of specific policy alternatives

  24. Policy Engagement Framework Political situational analysis Content Context Actors Process Positions PowerPlayers Perspectives Strategies to change Context Successful formulation & implementation of policy

  25. Research-practice gap model A gap that needs to be spanned

  26. The two communities model Researchers & policy makers: separate communities?

  27. Advocacy coalition model Or allied across apparent divides?

  28. Strategies for Policy Engagement Develop political strategies to change • Position: deals to make to change – alter policy, horse trading, promises, threats • Power: provide supporters with funds, personnel, access to media & officials • Players: change number of actors by mobilizing and demobilising, venue shifting • Perceptions: use data and arguments to question to alter perspectives of problem/solution, use associations, invoke symbols, emphasise doability

  29. Policy Process Mapping

  30. Policy Process Mapping • General Context issues – domestic and international. • Specific Policy Issues (i.e. the policy cycle) • Stakeholder analysis • Arena: government, parliament, civil society, judiciary, private sector. • Level: local, national, international • What is their Interest and Influence? • Process matrix + political matrix • Political and administrative feasibility assessment [Sources: M. Grindle / J. Court ]

  31. Policy Process Mapping

  32. Other Policy Mapping Tools • Policy Process Mapping • RAPID Framework • Stakeholder Analysis • Force-Field Analysis • Outcome Mapping • More complex tools: • Drivers of Change • Power Analysis • World Governance Assessment

  33. RAPID Framework

  34. High Keep Satisfied Engage Closely Power Monitor (minimum effort) Keep Informed Low Low High Interest Stakeholder Analysis • Why: • To understand who gains or lose from a policy or project. • To help Build Consensus. • Steps: • Identify Stakeholders • Analysis Workshop • Develop Strategies

  35. Forcefield Analysis • Identify what you want to achieve • Identify forces for and against change • Identify which are most important • Develop strategies to reinforce those for and overcome those against

  36. Policy Process Workshops • Looking at internal policy processes – what works in DFID. • Small, informal workshop with 7 staff. • Participatory pair-wise ranking of factors influencing the success of 8 policy processes. • Worked quite well. • In DFID - agendas and processes rather than documents are key

  37. OUTCOME MAPPING:Building Learning and Reflection into Development ProgramsSarah Earl, Fred Carden, and Terry Smutylo http://www.idrc.ca/en/ev-9330-201-1-DO_TOPIC.html Outcome Mapping

  38. More Complex Tools • Civil Society Index (CIVICUS) • Country Policy & Institutional Assessment (World Bank) • Democracy and Governance Assessment (USAID) • Drivers of Change (DFID) • Governance Questionnaire (GTZ) • Governance Matters (World Bank Institute) • Power Analysis (Sida) • World Governance Assessment

  39. Summary • Evidence-informed policy challenging • Policy about interests, institutions & ideas • Variety of tools to understand these factors - range in sophistication/complexity and ease of use • Tools to use the understanding to engage in policy processes – less well developed • Extent to which the tools are helpful depends on creativity, tenacity, inside knowledge – advocacy coalitions useful • You can get more info at …

  40. Further Information Mapping Political Contexts: http://www.odi.org.uk/RAPID/Publications/Tools_Political_Context.html Tools for Policy Impact: http://www.odi.org.uk/RAPID/Publications/Tools_Policy_Impact.html Best Practice in Policy Making: http://www.policyhub.gov.uk/policy_tools/ Understanding Policy Process:

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