Poverty reduction strategies in Canada: A new way to tackle an old problem?

Since the end 1990s, jurisdictions across the world have adopted an innovative governance process called a Poverty Reduction Strategy (PRS). PRS processes are a perfect example of a new governance dynamics in which collaboration between the public sector and the community sector is leveraged to deve...

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Main Authors: Notten, Geranda, Laforest, Rachel
Format: Report
Language:unknown
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Online Access:https://www.merit.unu.edu/publications/wppdf/2016/wp2016-057.pdf
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:unm:unumer:2016057 2023-05-15T17:22:55+02:00 Poverty reduction strategies in Canada: A new way to tackle an old problem? Notten, Geranda Laforest, Rachel https://www.merit.unu.edu/publications/wppdf/2016/wp2016-057.pdf unknown https://www.merit.unu.edu/publications/wppdf/2016/wp2016-057.pdf preprint ftrepec 2020-12-04T13:34:13Z Since the end 1990s, jurisdictions across the world have adopted an innovative governance process called a Poverty Reduction Strategy (PRS). PRS processes are a perfect example of a new governance dynamics in which collaboration between the public sector and the community sector is leveraged to develop policy solutions to complex problems such as poverty. Jurisdictions argue that this new process helps ensure continued prioritisation, improved information for decision making, and improved coordination between different units of government and other partners. In Canada nearly all provinces and territories now engage in a PRS process. This paper asks whether the PRS processes, as implemented by four Canadian provinces (Manitoba, Newfoundland and Labrador, Ontario and Quebec), have the potential to deliver on the expected governance benefits. This research is the first to connect theory to a widespread yet under-researched practice in government. We review the collaborative governance and performance management literatures for theories and empirical evidence on the costs and benefits of similar practices. We use official documents to identify a theory of change which explains how PRS processes could result in more poverty reduction. We use public information to describe and compare PRS processes in the four provinces. Our research shows that each province makes quite different choices in implementing its process and that such differences likely influence the degree to which aspired governance benefits are realised. When legislation supports the PRS process, provinces have more continuous activities and, where legislation details the role of non-government stakeholders, stakeholder involvement is more substantive and visible. There is now more public information on government’s actions but also still much scope for improvement, especially in linking fiscal expenses, effects of policy actions, and wellbeing outcomes. Whether new coordination mechanisms have been sufficient to yield substantive benefits in coordination is unclear. poverty reduction strategy (PRS), poverty reduction, collaborative governance, performance management, social policy Report Newfoundland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Canada Newfoundland
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collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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description Since the end 1990s, jurisdictions across the world have adopted an innovative governance process called a Poverty Reduction Strategy (PRS). PRS processes are a perfect example of a new governance dynamics in which collaboration between the public sector and the community sector is leveraged to develop policy solutions to complex problems such as poverty. Jurisdictions argue that this new process helps ensure continued prioritisation, improved information for decision making, and improved coordination between different units of government and other partners. In Canada nearly all provinces and territories now engage in a PRS process. This paper asks whether the PRS processes, as implemented by four Canadian provinces (Manitoba, Newfoundland and Labrador, Ontario and Quebec), have the potential to deliver on the expected governance benefits. This research is the first to connect theory to a widespread yet under-researched practice in government. We review the collaborative governance and performance management literatures for theories and empirical evidence on the costs and benefits of similar practices. We use official documents to identify a theory of change which explains how PRS processes could result in more poverty reduction. We use public information to describe and compare PRS processes in the four provinces. Our research shows that each province makes quite different choices in implementing its process and that such differences likely influence the degree to which aspired governance benefits are realised. When legislation supports the PRS process, provinces have more continuous activities and, where legislation details the role of non-government stakeholders, stakeholder involvement is more substantive and visible. There is now more public information on government’s actions but also still much scope for improvement, especially in linking fiscal expenses, effects of policy actions, and wellbeing outcomes. Whether new coordination mechanisms have been sufficient to yield substantive benefits in coordination is unclear. poverty reduction strategy (PRS), poverty reduction, collaborative governance, performance management, social policy
format Report
author Notten, Geranda
Laforest, Rachel
spellingShingle Notten, Geranda
Laforest, Rachel
Poverty reduction strategies in Canada: A new way to tackle an old problem?
author_facet Notten, Geranda
Laforest, Rachel
author_sort Notten, Geranda
title Poverty reduction strategies in Canada: A new way to tackle an old problem?
title_short Poverty reduction strategies in Canada: A new way to tackle an old problem?
title_full Poverty reduction strategies in Canada: A new way to tackle an old problem?
title_fullStr Poverty reduction strategies in Canada: A new way to tackle an old problem?
title_full_unstemmed Poverty reduction strategies in Canada: A new way to tackle an old problem?
title_sort poverty reduction strategies in canada: a new way to tackle an old problem?
url https://www.merit.unu.edu/publications/wppdf/2016/wp2016-057.pdf
geographic Canada
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geographic_facet Canada
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genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation https://www.merit.unu.edu/publications/wppdf/2016/wp2016-057.pdf
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