Theme : collaboration
- National College for School Leadership report on Leading in a multi-agency environment (pdf) - Name-checks the idea of 'collaborative advantage' - describes challenges of leading professionals from other backgrounds/disciplines - discusses professional and organisational socialisation from : duncanoleary 25th July 2006
- Open source disaster recovery Open source disaster recovery from : paulmiller 25th July 2006
- Entrepreneurs of Collaboration Historic examples of successful cooperative economies that emerged during the Great Depression era in the US. from : niamhgallagher 25th July 2006
- Open Source disaster recovery Case studies of networked collaboration. from : niamhgallagher 25th July 2006
- ESRC study: New forms of professional knowledge and practice in multi-agency services Finds that: - Heavy demands are made on the professionals involved in terms of their need to rethink their roles and switch to different kinds of activities and working practices. - Changes could threaten their sense of themselves as specialists when teams worked towards ‘blurring’ responsibilities to create generalist workers. In particular, specialists such as a teacher, health visitor, nurse or special needs nursery nurse, felt they had lost the particular [professional] identity from : duncanoleary 24th July 2006
- Public sector catches wikimania Guardian piece on public sector wikis from : paulmiller 19th July 2006
- Shaping Tomorrow Shaping Tomorrow helps people and organisations better anticipate and respond to world trends. from : charlieedwards 30th June 2006
- Global Business Network As a worldwide membership organization and scenario and strategy consultancy, GBN engages in a collaborative exploration of the future, discovering the frontiers of knowledge and creating innovative tools for strategic action and adaptive advantage. GBN chairman Peter Schwartz is the guru of scenario planning. from : charlieedwards 30th June 2006
- Collaboration nation What's going on with public services? On the one hand they're supposed to join up and become more holistic, on the other they seem to be becoming ever more fragmented and harder to govern. Schools, for instance, are getting wide ranging independence from local government, but they're still supposed to help solve social problems that involve working with children's trusts and the police.Can we get the benefits of specialisation and integration? Of course we can - and a lot of public servants... from : simonparker 8th June 2006
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