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Journal article

Policy dialogue and engagement between non-governmental organizations and government: A survey of processes and instruments of canadian policy workers

Abstract

Various analysts have raised concerns respecting declining research, evaluation and analytical capacities within public services. Typically, the decline is attributed to reforms associated with neoliberal restructuring of the state and its concomitant managerial expression in New Public Management (NPM). This has given rise to a conceptual shift now commonly captured as a movement from 'government' to 'governance'. Policy advising from a new governance perspective entails an image of a more distributed policy advisory system where a plurality f actors, including non-state actors, engages with government in deliberating policy interventions to address collective problems. The original research presented here suggests that those responsible for policy work across four policy communities in the three Canadian provinces surveyed differ in terms of their capacities, depth of commitment to a specific policy file/field, roles and functions, as well as perceptions of the policy work that they undertake. Over the past several years, a number of primarily quantitative analyses examining the processes, tools and perspectives of Canadian federal and provincial government policy analysts have been published. Consequently, a sig-nificant knowledge-base has been acquired respecting what government policy analysts do and their attitudes toward their work but very little is known about external interactions with non-governmental organizations (NGOs). © 2013 Bryan Evans, Adam Wellstead.

Authors

Evans B; Wellstead A

Journal

Central European Journal of Public Policy, Vol. 7, No. 1, pp. 60–87

Publication Date

July 30, 2013

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