Abstract
The Siloing and Fragmentation of Children’s Issues: With limited resources and focused attention, organizations tend to work in silos, conscripted by their specific issues. Consortia work around single themes. NGOs may work effectively in a defined geographic area, but success seldom informs public policy or goes to scale. Donors choose to work within certain issue areas – health, education, the environment, etc. – but find it difficult to reach across sectors for deeper, more holistic solutions. While the specialization of these efforts has a certain logic, some measurable results and definable benefits, the end result is a fragmented development landscape. Chapter 5 investigates how this siloing diffuses the impact of approaches to children’s issues and leaves millions of children out of reach.
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Notes
- 1.
Author Maya Ajmera developed and teaches this course.
- 2.
Based on 2013 review of course lists, professor biographies, majors and concentrations, and syllabi available on websites of all top-ranked public and private International Studies and Public Policy schools in the United States, as well as affiliated schools of Law, Education, Public Health, and Social Work, conducted by research coordinator Clare Dreyfus on behalf of the authors.
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Ajmera, M., Fields, G.A. (2016). Boxed in by Good Intentions—Working in Silos. In: Invisible Children. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-57838-9_5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-57838-9_5
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