Policy capacity matters for capacity development: comparing teacher in-service training and career advancement in basic education systems of India and China
Policy capacity matters for capacity development: comparing teacher in-service training and career advancement in basic education systems of India and China
Capacity development is central to the study and practice of public policy and administration, but ensuring its effectiveness requires a substantial amount of policy capacity from government agencies tasked to design and implement it. Identifying the right mix of policy capacity that governments should possess has been made difficult due to conceptual and operational problems. This article addresses the gap by developing a framework that conceptualizes policy capacity as the ability of governments to perform analytical, operational, and political functions. Drawing on the results of an original teacher survey and complementary sources, the article shows that variations on different dimensions of policy capacity have led to significant differences in the effectiveness of capacity development initiatives, especially as perceived by teachers. Therefore, without understanding and catering to the needs of the targets whose capacity is supposedly being developed, capacity development initiatives meant to be supportive are likely to be dissatisfying and disappointing instead.
294-310
Yan, Yifei
58cf8978-8af4-4efb-ba84-2437ee5fca11
Saguin, Kidjie
7df6d00d-d511-4be9-a659-d3694e1ea873
18 June 2021
Yan, Yifei
58cf8978-8af4-4efb-ba84-2437ee5fca11
Saguin, Kidjie
7df6d00d-d511-4be9-a659-d3694e1ea873
Yan, Yifei and Saguin, Kidjie
(2021)
Policy capacity matters for capacity development: comparing teacher in-service training and career advancement in basic education systems of India and China.
International Review of Administrative Sciences, 87 (2), .
(doi:10.1177/0020852320983867).
Abstract
Capacity development is central to the study and practice of public policy and administration, but ensuring its effectiveness requires a substantial amount of policy capacity from government agencies tasked to design and implement it. Identifying the right mix of policy capacity that governments should possess has been made difficult due to conceptual and operational problems. This article addresses the gap by developing a framework that conceptualizes policy capacity as the ability of governments to perform analytical, operational, and political functions. Drawing on the results of an original teacher survey and complementary sources, the article shows that variations on different dimensions of policy capacity have led to significant differences in the effectiveness of capacity development initiatives, especially as perceived by teachers. Therefore, without understanding and catering to the needs of the targets whose capacity is supposedly being developed, capacity development initiatives meant to be supportive are likely to be dissatisfying and disappointing instead.
Text
0020852320983867
- Version of Record
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e-pub ahead of print date: 18 January 2021
Published date: 18 June 2021
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Local EPrints ID: 476000
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/476000
ISSN: 0020-8523
PURE UUID: a0705904-cba8-4ebe-bffa-00220c39bd86
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Date deposited: 04 Apr 2023 16:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:18
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Author:
Yifei Yan
Author:
Kidjie Saguin
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