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Researching Partnerships: Politics, Ethics and Pragmatism

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Title: Researching Partnerships: Politics, Ethics and Pragmatism


1
Researching PartnershipsPolitics, Ethics and
Pragmatism
  • Sue Balloch Professor of Health and Social Care,
    University of Brighton

2
A New Governance of Welfare
  • Partnerships seen as central to new forms of
    governance
  • A political agenda for citizenship and
    empowerment
  • A paradigm shift in thinking which has remained
    very popular over the last decade

3
The Logic of Partnerships
  • Better than the unfettered workings of the market
  • Value for money
  • Seamless service delivery
  • Breaking down barriers
  • Sharing information
  • Putting the service users/consumers at the heart
    of policy and practice

4
What is the evidence base?
  • Government commitment to evidence based practice
    would suggest a strong evidence base for
    partnerships
  • In fact research is quite limited and is mostly
    confined to the public/voluntary sectors what
    there is on public/private partnerships suggest
    the latter do well from the arrangement
  • Health and social care and neighbourhood renewal
    among the main research areas

5
Types of research into partnerships
  • Research and evaluation reports
  • Analysis of cross cutting issues e.g. inter
    professional training and working
  • Toolkits and guides
  • Theoretical overviews and syntheses (See
    Percy-Smith 2005)
  • We will now take a look at the first and the last
    of these

6
Research and Evaluation
  • Major national initiatives politically driven
    with a need for positive evaluation because of
    substantial financial investment
  • Example 39 New Deal for Communities projects
    each awarded around 50m over ten years
  • Most of this research is policy driven and
    developed from an audit rather than a research
    culture e.g. Sure Start, Childrens Fund
  • Researchers sometimes struggle to present their
    analysis as they would wish

7
Concern over validity of evaluations
  • Concern voiced in forthcoming issue of Public
    Administration Review over validity of program
    evaluation in USA
  • When politically sensitive programs ..aligned
    with the political party in power are to be
    evaluated, administrators have an interest in
    minimizing the uncertainty of evaluation results
    and will likely favor in-house evaluation or
    third-party evaluation by a research firm thought
    to be supportive of the program

8
Structure, Process and Outcome in Partnership
Evaluation
  • Three types of indicators can be used. Most
    evaluations are a lot better on structure and
    process than on outcomes.
  • National and local divisions often national
    indicators leave out issues that local people are
    very concerned about (Ambrose in Taylor and
    Balloch, 2005, gives examples)
  • National and local evaluations dont always tie
    up so research at the national level isnt
    validated at the local level and vice versa

9
Systematic Review of Joint Working
  • Identified three major research categories
    (Cameron, Lart, Harrison, Macdonald and Smith,
    2000, based on 32 studies)
  • Organisational issues aims, roles,
    support,communications, co-location, resources,
    past history etc.
  • Cultural and professional issues stereotypes,
    trust and respect, joint training, differing
    ideologies.
  • Contextual issues political climate, constant
    reorganisation, coterminosity, financial
    uncertainty

10
Outcomes
  • Difficulties in researching outcomes include
  • complex nature of outcomes
  • need for lengthy period for assessing outcomes
  • ascertaining the extent to which the outcome is
    the result of the partnership
  • different definitions of desired outcomes

11
Does partnership working deliver improved
outcomes for service users?
  • Rummery partnership working often strengthens
    the hand of the statelittle evidence that (it)
    delivers improved services to users and could
    sometimes even have a negative effect (2003 p243)
  • Hudson confirms difficulties that partnership
    working has in putting user and carer engagement
    at the forefront of activity (see Social Policy
    and Society, April, 2006 p227-237)

12
Theoretical Frameworks for Researching
Partnerships
  • Research into partnerships criticised for being
    theoretically underdeveloped (McDonald, Journal
    of Social Policy, 2005 pp 579-601)
  • Three possible frameworks
  • Governance of welfare approach
  • Whole systems approach
  • Complexity theory approach

13
Whole Systems
  • Distinguishes between four different types of
    working relationships
  • Competition Co-operation
  • Co-ordinationCo-evolution
  • See model devised by Pratt, Gordon and Plamping
    in Working Whole Systems, Kings Fund, 1999
  • Most types of partnership working fall between
    the first and second types.

14
Complexity Theory
  • Tiny changes can create major changes over time
  • Systems are unpredictable
  • What we think of as a system is probably not
    one at all we need maps of our own organisation
    to locate ourselves
  • Leadership becomes very important
  • Trust between individuals is fundamental
  • (See Haynes 2003)

15
Networks and Communities of Practice
  • Complexity theory encourages us to think about
    partnerships in different ways e.g
  • As networks (see Hudson p 3-13 in Journal of
    Integrated Care, February 2007)
  • As Communities of Practice in which the
    interests and aims are shared and there is a
    commitment to mutual benefit for all partners
    see www.cupp.org.uk, the website of Brighton
    Universitys Community University Partnership

16
Pity the Researcher!
  • Major difficulties where researchers are working
    with people with very different perceptions of
    how partnerships do and should work
  • Unequal power and status divisions make this more
    complicated still lots of unspoken agendas and
    hidden conflicts
  • Goal posts get moved while research is taking
    place
  • (See Balloch et al 2005)

17
Ethics
  • Importance of observing good ethics practice and
    ensuring well being and empowerment of those
    involved
  • Difficult to develop a participatory approach to
    research when the partnership is top down
  • Major restrictions placed on partnership research
    by health ethics demands and domination of the
    medical model
  • Predicted disappearance of small scale local
    research projects

18
Pragmatism in research
  • Recognise the politics
  • Be clear about research responsibilities
  • Clarify the ethics issues
  • Focus on both measurable and perceived outcomes
    as well as process
  • Aim for the longer term by enabling those
    involved to carry out their own research and use
    the findings
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