Public Problem Solving is a consortium of public policy educators hosted by the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies.
Philip Zelikow, Texas National Security Review, September 2019
Effective policymaking is difficult. The “hardware” of policymaking — the tools and structures of government that frame the possibilities for useful work — are obviously important. Less obvious is that policy performance in practice often rests more on the “software” of public problem-solving: the way people size up problems, design actions, and implement policy.
Beth Simone Noveck & Rod Glover, ANZSOG Report, August 2019
Commissioned by the Australia and New Zealand School of Government (ANZSOG), this report builds on a pioneering survey of almost 400 public servants in Australia and New Zealand, dozens of interviews with senior practitioners, and original research into how governments around the world are training public officials in innovative practices..
Beth Simone Noveck, Apolitical, June 2019
The 21st century public leader — the public entrepreneur — needs the ability to innovate and this requires new skills, including the know-how to define actionable and specific problems.
Tara McGuiness & Anne-Marie Slaughter, Stanford Social Innovation Review, Spring 2019
A new class of innovators is advancing the public good by figuring out what people actually need and then testing, improving, and scaling solutions that may already be out there. Here are the four elements of their method.
Susan Marquis, Rand Review, January 2019
The problems we face today have become so complex, so interconnected, and so shifting that we need new ways of thinking to solve them.
Francis Fukuyama, The American Interest, August 2018
Most programs train students to become capable policy analysts, but with no understanding of how to implement those policies in the real world.
The Volcker Alliance, May 2018
Government agencies at all levels face management challenges of immense scale and complexity. In the decades ahead, these challenges will continue to grow as the nation confronts a wave of retiring career government professionals.
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