Structures for strategy : institutional preconditions for long-range planning in cross-country perspective

From climate change to economic instability, a range of persistent interdisciplinary challenges has heightened calls for a more integrative approach to policy planning in the US federal government. Long-range planning processes are still largely compartmentalized within executive branch departments....

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Main Author: Zorn, Justin
Other Authors: S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: 2012
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/94471
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/7535
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-944712020-11-01T08:41:01Z Structures for strategy : institutional preconditions for long-range planning in cross-country perspective Zorn, Justin S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies DRNTU::Social sciences::Political science From climate change to economic instability, a range of persistent interdisciplinary challenges has heightened calls for a more integrative approach to policy planning in the US federal government. Long-range planning processes are still largely compartmentalized within executive branch departments. While much of the literature on US planning attributes the absence of systematic coordination in long-term policy planning to several characteristics inherent in modern representative governments including frequent electoral turnover, bureaucratic competition for influence, pervasive media leaks, and difficulty accruing political gains from crisis prevention, such analyses fail to account for why other representative governments including the United Kingdom have established more centralized strategic planning architecture. The UK Government created a National Foresight Programme in 1994 to track multidisciplinary long-range issues related to innovation and a Horizon Scanning Centre in 2004 to coordinate priority-setting, risk assessment, and strategy formation across a range of departmental jurisdictions. Drawing on interviews with government officials and analysis of organizational arrangements, speeches, and memoranda, this paper seeks to investigate why the US federal government maintains a compartmentalized framework for strategic planning while the UK has adopted a more centrally-coordinated framework. By briefly comparing a series of secondary case studies including Brazil, India, South Korea, and Singapore, the paper seeks to identify a more general set of institutional preconditions for the development of interdisciplinary planning programs at the national level. 2012-02-24T07:50:08Z 2019-12-06T18:56:38Z 2012-02-24T07:50:08Z 2019-12-06T18:56:38Z 2011 2011 Working Paper Zorn, J. (2011). Structures for strategy : institutional preconditions for long-range planning in cross-country perspective. (RSIS Working Paper, No. 223). Singapore: Nanyang Technological University. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/94471 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/7535 en RSIS Working Papers ; 223-11 32 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Political science
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Political science
Zorn, Justin
Structures for strategy : institutional preconditions for long-range planning in cross-country perspective
description From climate change to economic instability, a range of persistent interdisciplinary challenges has heightened calls for a more integrative approach to policy planning in the US federal government. Long-range planning processes are still largely compartmentalized within executive branch departments. While much of the literature on US planning attributes the absence of systematic coordination in long-term policy planning to several characteristics inherent in modern representative governments including frequent electoral turnover, bureaucratic competition for influence, pervasive media leaks, and difficulty accruing political gains from crisis prevention, such analyses fail to account for why other representative governments including the United Kingdom have established more centralized strategic planning architecture. The UK Government created a National Foresight Programme in 1994 to track multidisciplinary long-range issues related to innovation and a Horizon Scanning Centre in 2004 to coordinate priority-setting, risk assessment, and strategy formation across a range of departmental jurisdictions. Drawing on interviews with government officials and analysis of organizational arrangements, speeches, and memoranda, this paper seeks to investigate why the US federal government maintains a compartmentalized framework for strategic planning while the UK has adopted a more centrally-coordinated framework. By briefly comparing a series of secondary case studies including Brazil, India, South Korea, and Singapore, the paper seeks to identify a more general set of institutional preconditions for the development of interdisciplinary planning programs at the national level.
author2 S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
author_facet S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
Zorn, Justin
format Working Paper
author Zorn, Justin
author_sort Zorn, Justin
title Structures for strategy : institutional preconditions for long-range planning in cross-country perspective
title_short Structures for strategy : institutional preconditions for long-range planning in cross-country perspective
title_full Structures for strategy : institutional preconditions for long-range planning in cross-country perspective
title_fullStr Structures for strategy : institutional preconditions for long-range planning in cross-country perspective
title_full_unstemmed Structures for strategy : institutional preconditions for long-range planning in cross-country perspective
title_sort structures for strategy : institutional preconditions for long-range planning in cross-country perspective
publishDate 2012
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/94471
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/7535
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