Opinion: He Poneketanga: Social Investment
25/10/2024
The difference between policy dreams and real-world change lies in one crucial factor: implementation.
Success or failure ultimately rests with the people who transform ideas into action.
I’m excited to announce He Pōneketanga, my new monthly column offering unique insights into the intricate dynamics between elected officials and civil servants. Drawing from my experience working at this intersection, I’ll explore the day-to-day realities that shape policy outcomes.
Join me for my debut piece, where I examine social investment through this implementation lens. Discover how the mechanics of delivery can make or break even the most promising initiatives.
https://businessdesk.co.nz/article/opinion/why-social-investment-is-exciting
Te Rā Whakamana: Operational Capac …
Schick, then Ryan and Gill (2011), and Tenbensel et al (2026) This week, the series reads three pieces of local implementation scholarship alongside one another, written across the better part of three decades and from quite different vantage points. There is Allen Schick’s 1996 review of the reforms, and the warnings it carried. There is Bill Ryan and Derek Gill’s later account, written i...
Read moreAdministrative Burden: The Woman …
When the State Designs for a Person Who Does Not Exist This is the fourth post in a series about what it actually costs to navigate the state. Last month, I examined how burdens fall hardest on the least resourced. I also introduced the research on “deservingness”. Today, I turn to gender. The hypothesis that the unpaid labour of navigating the state falls disproportionately on women, and ...
Read moreLoose Threads: The Other Allison
E te whānau. A longer Loose Thread this week, prompted by a moment in Beijing that has sent half the commentariat scrambling for their Thucydides. Graham Allison is having his moment in the foreign policy sun. But the Allison I want to talk about is the one almost nobody remembers. This post starts with his trap, notes who was already using it, and then turns to an argument about gover...
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