Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Notes on the authors and contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Introduction: Why is redesign of public policy needed?
- Chapter One Possibilities for policy design
- Chapter Two Conventional policy design
- Chapter Three Co-productive policy design
- Section One Challenges and change within conventional policy design
- Section Two Vision in co-productive policy design
- Section Three Grammar in co-productive policy design
- Chapter Four Debating co-productive policy design
- Chapter Five Governance for co-productive policy designs
- Epilogue Co-producing research
- References
- Index
The hidden politics of policy design
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 September 2022
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Notes on the authors and contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Introduction: Why is redesign of public policy needed?
- Chapter One Possibilities for policy design
- Chapter Two Conventional policy design
- Chapter Three Co-productive policy design
- Section One Challenges and change within conventional policy design
- Section Two Vision in co-productive policy design
- Section Three Grammar in co-productive policy design
- Chapter Four Debating co-productive policy design
- Chapter Five Governance for co-productive policy designs
- Epilogue Co-producing research
- References
- Index
Summary
This contribution reflects on the experience of being involved in an attempt to collaboratively develop and model proposals for open government. The contributors thoughtfully and carefully set out a range of challenging issues for more collaborative forms of policy design, reflecting on the interests and experiences of different stakeholders from both government and civil society. In doing so, they show how politics and values are central, if often hidden, in policy making. In particular, they show that seeking to make policy differently raises questions of legitimacy, representation, the exercise of authority, how trade-offs between competing interests and values are made, the allocation of risk and accountability and the interplay between different processes and cultures. This contribution demonstrates that failing to recognise these political dynamics risks undermining the legitimacy and viability of new forms of more co-productive policy design.
[We have] consistently made clear our commitment for the UK to become ‘the most open and transparent government in the world’. Our resolve has not weakened. Indeed, our engagement with civil society to develop and agree the stretching and ambitious commitments in this second Open Government Partnership UK National Action Plan has strengthened, not lessened our commitment to open government. The result of this partnership is a set of commitments that take important steps towards increased openness. (Rt Hon Francis Maude MP, Minister for the Cabinet Office and Paymaster General, 2013)
This contribution draws on an example of open, collaborative policy making which took place over the course of 18 months. Looking back on the process and therefore with the benefit of hindsight, we feel we have learnt a number of lessons about what makes for successful, open and collaborative policy processes. Collaborative policy making can only flourish when it has the political space to do so and this can only be opened, and kept open, by senior politicians. Without ‘senior’ permission to act differently, those within the process are unable to develop the creativity and flexibility required to identify and reach a commonly defined goal.
Politics, in the sense of shifting power balances and individual interests clamouring to be heard, churn just below the surface of any collaborative process.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Designing Public Policy for Co-productionTheory, Practice and Change, pp. 71 - 80Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2015