Public and Third Sector Collaboration - Can It Really Work?

Research output: Contribution to conferencePoster

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Public and Third Sector Collaboration - Can It Really Work? / Woodcock, Elizabeth.
2016. Poster session presented at WISERD Annual Conference 2016, Swansea, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conferencePoster

HarvardHarvard

Woodcock, E 2016, 'Public and Third Sector Collaboration - Can It Really Work?', WISERD Annual Conference 2016, Swansea, United Kingdom, 5/07/16 - 7/07/16.

APA

Woodcock, E. (2016). Public and Third Sector Collaboration - Can It Really Work?. Poster session presented at WISERD Annual Conference 2016, Swansea, United Kingdom.

CBE

Woodcock E. 2016. Public and Third Sector Collaboration - Can It Really Work?. Poster session presented at WISERD Annual Conference 2016, Swansea, United Kingdom.

MLA

Woodcock, Elizabeth Public and Third Sector Collaboration - Can It Really Work?. WISERD Annual Conference 2016, 05 Jul 2016, Swansea, United Kingdom, Poster, 2016.

VancouverVancouver

Woodcock E. Public and Third Sector Collaboration - Can It Really Work?. 2016. Poster session presented at WISERD Annual Conference 2016, Swansea, United Kingdom.

Author

Woodcock, Elizabeth. / Public and Third Sector Collaboration - Can It Really Work?. Poster session presented at WISERD Annual Conference 2016, Swansea, United Kingdom.

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Public and Third Sector Collaboration - Can It Really Work?

AU - Woodcock, Elizabeth

PY - 2016/7/13

Y1 - 2016/7/13

N2 - The Well-being of Future Generations (Wales) Act 2015 requires public bodies to involve and collaborate with the third sector. Third sector organisations want to work more closely with public bodies. But collaboration even within the public sector is underdeveloped, and third sector organisations express disappointment at the level of their involvement with public bodies.However, the Act’s national well-being goals and principle of integrated working may provide the conditions for greater levels of collaboration which have the potential to transform the way the two sectors jointly deliver public services in Wales. If third sector organisations can show how their activities contribute to the well-being goals then public bodies can see how this fits with their own contribution, motivating them to work together. If in addition third sector organisations can show how their activities not only meet their own aims, such as improving wildlife habitats, but also meet public bodies’ concerns, such as increasing how much exercise people take, then public bodies have an incentive to support or even do those activities themselves. In order to understand the full contribution of the third sector to well-being public bodies may need to work at the conditions for effective communication between the two sectors.This new research project works with North Wales Wildlife Trust (NWWT) and public bodies in North Wales to understand what those conditions for effective communication may involve. The project helps NWWT to understand how its activities contribute to the well-being goals and how they affect people’s feelings of well-being or life satisfaction. It works with public bodies to develop ways of communicating with the third sector so that its contribution can be taken into account in the public bodies’ strategic well-being planning.

AB - The Well-being of Future Generations (Wales) Act 2015 requires public bodies to involve and collaborate with the third sector. Third sector organisations want to work more closely with public bodies. But collaboration even within the public sector is underdeveloped, and third sector organisations express disappointment at the level of their involvement with public bodies.However, the Act’s national well-being goals and principle of integrated working may provide the conditions for greater levels of collaboration which have the potential to transform the way the two sectors jointly deliver public services in Wales. If third sector organisations can show how their activities contribute to the well-being goals then public bodies can see how this fits with their own contribution, motivating them to work together. If in addition third sector organisations can show how their activities not only meet their own aims, such as improving wildlife habitats, but also meet public bodies’ concerns, such as increasing how much exercise people take, then public bodies have an incentive to support or even do those activities themselves. In order to understand the full contribution of the third sector to well-being public bodies may need to work at the conditions for effective communication between the two sectors.This new research project works with North Wales Wildlife Trust (NWWT) and public bodies in North Wales to understand what those conditions for effective communication may involve. The project helps NWWT to understand how its activities contribute to the well-being goals and how they affect people’s feelings of well-being or life satisfaction. It works with public bodies to develop ways of communicating with the third sector so that its contribution can be taken into account in the public bodies’ strategic well-being planning.

M3 - Poster

T2 - WISERD Annual Conference 2016

Y2 - 5 July 2016 through 7 July 2016

ER -