Funding Brokerage Mo
Funding Brokerage Mo
Funding Brokerage Mo
Section A
Context
In recent years, Australia has seen the introduction of managerial and market
reforms of the public sector, leading to a shift towards a contracting relationship with
the third sector. There has been a subsequent resurgence of the idea of ‘partnership’
between government and the third sector, recognising the value of long-term,
collaborative relationships between the ‘purchaser’ and the ‘supplier’ of services. This
suggests that currently the contracting relationship in Australia is rhetorically more
partnership than market model. Government has also promoted networking within the
third sector through informal encouragement or through contract specification, such
as in the case of the Child Care Support programme and the Communities for
Children programme1, which is the case discussed here.
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Alternative approaches to capacity building – emerging practices abroad
in turn, engage with frontline service providers (third sector or government). This
model introduces the role of nonprofit agencies as purchasers creating a three tier
approach of government as funder, nonprofit as purchaser and nonprofit, for profit
and government (other levels) as providers.2 The Facilitating Partner facilitates the
identification of local needs and planning, and then supports smaller local
organisations to establish services, or establishes contracts with other non-local and
larger non-profits with expertise to support the delivery of specialist services locally.
According to the logic model of the Initiative, service effectiveness is dependent not
only on the nature and number of services, but also on how seamless the service
delivery is. Thus much of the CfC effort has been devoted not only to providing new
services, but to ‘joining up’ existing services by increasing service coordination and
cooperation. While the programme did not explicitly plan to build capacity through
networking, the creation of local groups of Community Partners developed
organisational networks for peer support and collaboration around early years
services.
The framing discourse is that capacity can be built from the top-down through
channelling resources effectively and providing resources for capacity development
(funding, training, the creation of space for networking etc). The approach is one that
encourages learning on contracting for services and partnership development across
the locality, rather than the more arm’s length experience of contracting with the
state, and enabled smaller organisations to develop capacity to compete for funding.
2
Baulderstone and Earles, 2008. Changing Relationships: How government funding models impact
relationships between organizations. Paper presented at ISTR Conference.
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Alternative approaches to capacity building – emerging practices abroad
The initiative provides funding to third sector ‘facilitating partners’, who in turn will
mediate/translate between the federal funding agency and community partners. The
facilitating partners are responsible for managing the consultation and planning
process, tendering and contract management and managing the reporting between
the funding department and the community partners.
The government’s criteria for identifying third sector organizations to take on this role
are: -
• experience in delivering large and complex programmes;
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Alternative approaches to capacity building – emerging practices abroad
Hence they are working on the basis that the capacity-builders have the necessary
capacity to act as brokers and partners, but require funding to carry out this work. In
practice, some FPs needed support or training to fulfil this role (see below).
The Facilitating Partners model has potential for local definition of priorities but is as
a whole a prescriptive initiative, defined at the macro-level, and with its structures
and processes pre-established. Central government funding goes to contracted
TSOs, who in turn contract community partners to deliver services, but also partner
them and support them to join up their work in the locality. The target populations in
the CfC sites appear more disadvantaged on most of the relevant indicators. More
than half of the sites (23) were amongst the most disadvantaged 10 percent of areas
in Australia. CfC sites had higher proportions of children aged 0-5 who live in lone
parent households than the national average, higher proportions with a parent
unemployed, and higher proportions who live in low-income families. Families with
children aged 0-5 years in CfC areas were also more culturally diverse, and there
were higher proportions of children in CfC sites with mothers who don’t speak
English very well. CfC sites also had higher proportions of children who were
Indigenous, compared with Australia as a whole. Populations in CfC areas were also
less likely to have attained Year 12 or equivalent levels of qualifications.
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Alternative approaches to capacity building – emerging practices abroad
Community hubs and co-located services are effective vehicles for meeting the
needs of families with multiple and complex needs, such as newly arrived refugee
families and other CALD groups. They also offer benefits for the services involved,
such as sharing of information and resources and collegiate support.
The first phase of this approach involves building a stakeholder network in the locality
which was institutionalised as the Community Committee.
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4
See: Promising Practice Profiles, Final report. A report prepared for the Department of Families,
Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs as part of the National Evaluation Consortium
(Social Policy Research Centre, UNSW and the Australian Institute of Family Studies) Grace Soriano,
Haley Clark & Sarah Wise June 2008.
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Alternative approaches to capacity building – emerging practices abroad
“Reflective practice” is a key ingredient for enhancing service provision. This process
involves purposive planning, data collection and analysis and reflection/evaluation. A
good understanding of local needs is another ingredient in responsive service
provision, particularly for those working with Indigenous or ‘culturally and linguistically
diverse (CALD)’ communities, and this is achieved in some programmes by
undertaking a community asset inventory or needs analysis, as well as liaison and
networking with key community members.
Across the programmes, creating networks and partnerships with other services is an
effective way to enhance service provision. Strategies in developing and maintaining
successful partnerships include: a single coordinator/contact person, a reference
group, regular communication (e.g., dialogue meetings between different services),
extensive preliminary and ongoing promotion, common goals, and a practice and
“solution” focus. Partnerships were reflected in a range of activities and initiatives,
from formal collaborative agreements, to joint one-off activities, informal time-limited
projects, or participation in community events organised by other organisations and
regular visits to other services for the purpose of information exchange.
The process lasted four years (an initial 3 years which was extended to four in some
cases: sites were rolled out in three stages, sites that had three year funding in the
first stage were extended for a further year so all sites finished at the same time), and
a further 3-4 years have now been agreed.
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Alternative approaches to capacity building – emerging practices abroad
Indigenous, compared with Australia as a whole. Populations in CfC areas were also
less likely to have attained Year 12 or equivalent levels of qualifications.
Section D: Outcomes
Due to its community- facilitated implementation, CfC appears to have facilitated
some improvements in service delivery and quality in the sites. Local plans were
developed that gave stakeholders the opportunity to build on community strengths
and address some service gaps and put early years strategies in place that they felt
were most helpful for their site.
The implementation of CfC was inhibited in some ways by the artificially constructed
boundaries of some CfC sites, which were contrary to locally defined communities.
The sites usually encompassed several suburbs or settlements, or even large rural or
remote areas which were not always one locally defined natural community. This
created significant obstacles to the FPs' ability in these cases to engage all relevant
stakeholders, improve service coordination long-term and deliver services to young
children and their families in all parts of the site.
CfC appears to have been useful as a vehicle for increasing the level of service
cooperation in the sites. Under the model, the FPs were required to establish the
Communities for Children Committee (CCC), a working group of child and family
services and other stakeholders in their site. Most interviewees regarded the CCC
very positively. They reported that the FPs had made a genuine effort at being open
and inclusive by inviting all relevant stakeholder organisations as well as community
members into the CCC. Many CCC members said how useful and rewarding their
involvement was, especially in sites where no other early years network existed.
Service providers could interact with others in the field and share knowledge. Most
interviewees felt that the CCC had reduced segregation and competition among
services and created mutual respect.
The degree to which CPs internalised change (beyond getting skilled up enough to
be recipients of funding) varied within each organisation. At the level of intervention
and individual worker (grounded) there was considerable internalisation of change,
through the capacity building interventions from the FP through training and
mentoring and from the CP group which developed collaboration and partnership
building. In the smaller organisations this flowed through to impact on management
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Alternative approaches to capacity building – emerging practices abroad
and governance, while in larger organisations this was not needed. Participants
developed a different understanding of intervention conceptualisation, design,
implementation, monitoring and evaluation: Community partner organisations were
not well skilled or experienced in conceptualising projects and carrying them through
themselves to design, budgeting and implementation. Their experience was more of
responding to government consultations to define the gaps and needs rather than a
strategic involvement in service design. The training and mentoring process helped
organisations to develop a more proactive approach to interventions and projects5.
Section E: Learning
The model works across different levels and aims to join up services locally. It also
networks third sector, government and private sector children’s service providers at
the local level.
Networking between sites was more limited. The Department held annual FP
conferences, and in cases where larger TSOs had branches acting as FPs in more
than one site, these organisations brought site managers together on a regular basis
for discussions and sharing across sites. However at FP level the ground is still very
competitive as they must tender to be FPs. One development at the end of the first 3-
4 years was when the government department decided not to fund and hold a
national conference, a group of FPs took the initiative to set one up and all FPs
attended and paid for themselves. The government department was then obliged to
respond and attend. This suggests that even in a competitive funding environment
there is room for collaborative action and TSO ‘think’.
Learning was shared mostly through the national evaluation and the mechanisms of
themed studies and ‘promising practice profiles’, plus some commissioned papers
(under the ARACY alliance for research about children and youth) on such things as
school readiness, collaboration and sustainability.
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Alternative approaches to capacity building – emerging practices abroad
The model represents a shift in paradigm from service management for delivery, to
project management (to support others to deliver). In future rounds the funders are
recognising that FPs need to provide a capacity building role and a contract
manager role and that these may need to come from different parts of the FP
organisational structure. The new government has refunded the programme and it
the centre piece of its new early childhood policy agenda.
Cascade models
A top-down model can be effective if sufficient flexibility is built in to allow outcomes
and strategies to change along the way. The approach here was site specific, and
allowed for FPs to change from channelling funding to capacity development
interventions with Community Partners where appropriate. There are some parallels
here with the US case, where approaches are trying to change funder-CB recipient
relationships into longer-term partnerships.
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