Examining the Contextual Factors Influencing Intersectoral Action for the SDGs: Insights From Canadian Federal Policy Leaders.

IF 3.1 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES International Journal of Health Policy and Management Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-14 DOI:10.34172/ijhpm.8108
Joslyn Trowbridge, Julia Y Tan, Sameera Hussain, Erica Di Ruggiero
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Abstract

Background: The interdependent and intersecting nature of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) require collaboration across government sectors, and it is likely that departments with few past interactions will find themselves engaged in joint missions on SDG projects. Intersectoral action (IA) is becoming a common framework for different sectors to work together. Understanding the factors in the environment external to policy teams enacting IA is crucial for making progress on the SDGs.

Methods: Interviews [n=17] with senior public servants leading SDG work in nine departments in the federal government of Canada were conducted to elicit information about issues affecting how departments engage in IA for the SDGs. Transcripts were coded based on a set of factors identified in a background review of 20 documents related to Canada's progress on SDGs. Iterative group thematic analysis by the authors illuminated a set of domestic and global contextual factors affecting IA processes for the SDGs.

Results: The mechanisms for successful IA were identified as facilitative governance, leadership by a central coordinating office, supportive staff, flexible and clear reporting structures, adequate resources, and targeted skills development focused on collaboration and cross-sector learning. Factors that affect IA positively include alignment of the SDG agenda with domestic and global political priorities, and the co-occurrence of social issues such as Indigenous rights and gender equity that raise awareness of and support for related SDGs. Factors that affect IA negatively include competing conceptual frameworks for approaching shared priorities, lack of capacity for "big picture" thinking among bureaucratic staff, and global disruptions that shift national priorities away from the SDGs.

Conclusion: IA is becoming a normal way of working on problems that cross otherwise separate government accountabilities. The success of these collaborations can be impacted by contextual factors beyond any one department's control.

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研究影响可持续发展目标跨部门行动的背景因素:加拿大联邦政策领导人的见解。
背景:可持续发展目标(SDGs)具有相互依存和相互交叉的性质,这就要求政府各部门之间开展合作,而且过去很少互动的部门很可能会发现自己参与了可持续发展目标项目的联合任务。跨部门行动(IA)正在成为不同部门合作的共同框架。要在可持续发展目标方面取得进展,了解政策团队开展跨部门行动的外部环境因素至关重要:对加拿大联邦政府九个部门中领导可持续发展目标工作的高级公务员进行了访谈 [n=17],以了解影响各部门如何参与可持续发展目标内部行动的问题。根据对 20 份与加拿大在可持续发展目标方面的进展有关的文件进行的背景审查中确定的一系列因素,对笔录进行了编码。作者通过迭代式小组专题分析,揭示了一系列影响可持续发展目标内审进程的国内和全球背景因素:成功实施可持续发展目标的机制包括:促进性治理、中央协调办公室的领导、提供支持的工作人员、灵活明确的报告结构、充足的资源以及以合作和跨部门学习为重点的有针对性的技能发展。对机构实施产生积极影响的因素包括:可持续发展目标议程与国内和全球政治优先事项相一致,以及同时出现土著权利和性别平等等社会问题,从而提高对相关可持续发展目标的认识和支持。对实施工作产生负面影响的因素包括:在处理共同优先事项时存在相互竞争的概念框 架;官僚工作人员缺乏 "大局 "思维能力;全球干扰因素使国家优先事项偏离了可持续发 展目标:IA 正在成为一种正常的工作方式,用于解决那些原本跨越不同政府职责的问题。这些合作的成功可能会受到任何一个部门无法控制的背景因素的影响。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Health Policy and Management
International Journal of Health Policy and Management Health Professions-Health Information Management
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
14.30%
发文量
142
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal of Health Policy and Management (IJHPM) is a monthly open access, peer-reviewed journal which serves as an international and interdisciplinary setting for the dissemination of health policy and management research. It brings together individual specialties from different fields, notably health management/policy/economics, epidemiology, social/public policy, and philosophy into a dynamic academic mix.
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