Telling the Story of Canada’s Children A Comprehensive Approach to Accountability National...

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Telling the Story of Canada’s Children A Comprehensive Approach to Accountability National Children’s Alliance November 26, 2004

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Page 1: Telling the Story of Canada’s Children A Comprehensive Approach to Accountability National Children’s Alliance November 26, 2004.

Telling the Story of Canada’s Children

A Comprehensive Approach to Accountability

National Children’s Alliance

November 26, 2004

Page 2: Telling the Story of Canada’s Children A Comprehensive Approach to Accountability National Children’s Alliance November 26, 2004.

Accountability and Monitoring

• Since 2000 the Alliance has taken a leadership role in facilitating dialogue on the issue of accountability

• Involved in facilitating research and dialogue around the f/p/t agreements (SUFA, NCA, ECDI, M-L-F)

• Over the last four years the Alliance has evolved its thinking about the role of the “third sector” in accountability within this context

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Towards Accountability…

• Throughout our work the Alliance continued its dialogue about the role of the “third sector” and came to the conclusion that this role is more than monitoring government agreements

• The intersecting roles of governments and the voluntary sector as partners in service delivery require a partnership in monitoring

• Therefore, the focus gradually began to switch from monitoring to accountability

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Key themes

Consistent throughout our work:• Need for evidence-based decision-making• Ecological model as foundational• Determinants of health approach• Engagement critical to accountability• Commitment to reflecting inter-related influences

on children’s development• Asking the “right questions” critical• Inclusion of voices of children and youth

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What do we need to know?

• CHILDREN – What is the progress of children and youth in Canada in reaching their potential?

• FAMILIES -- How well are families able to contribute to the optimal development of their children?

• COMMUNITIES – What are communities (all sectors) doing to support children, youth and families?

• GOVERNMENTS – How are governments sustaining the capacities of communities, families, children and youth?

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Being accountable

• Accountability is about “being responsible” with and obligation to “answer” for one’s actions

• This means being able to track progress over time in a way that is meaningful to all stakeholders

• In the end, for the Alliance it means being able to “tell the story of all Canada’s children”

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Moving towards accountability…

The Alliance recognized that accountability requires engagement processes that are:

• Cross-sectoral (Governments, Voluntary Sector, Private Sector)

• Intergovernmental (Federal/Provincial/Territorial/Regional/Municipal/Aboriginal)

• Horizontal (health, social, education, recreation, environment, etc…)

• Vertical (from grassroots communities to pan-Canadian)

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Role of Voluntary Sector

• The Alliance believes that the voluntary sector is in a unique position to take the leadership role on accountability

• Voluntary sector has credibility with the public• Voluntary sector can leverage partnerships with

the other stakeholders• Voluntary sector has “on the ground” linkages and

presence in communities

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How can accountability be achieved?

• Through a sustainable mechanism it is possible to support a long term, cohesive approach to accountability for children in Canada

• The Alliance recommends creation of a “Council” that would build the collective capacity of all stakeholders to exercise their roles and responsibilities

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Mandate of the Council

• Increase body of knowledge on accountability for health and well-being of Canada’s children

• Build capacity of all sectors to be accountable• Develop and engage cross-sectoral and multi-

disciplinary networks • Track investments and impacts for children and

families• Build capacity of communities to articulate

objectives and “tell the story”

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Functions of the “Council”

• Research and Development

• Knowledge Translation

• Network and Partnership Development

• Tracking progress towards agreed upon objectives

• Reporting

• Mobilizing for change

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Research and Development

• Pan-Canadian data strategy

• Co-ordination of data collection and access

• Resource “bank” of expertise

• Accountability model development (includes objectives, roles and responsibilities, framework of questions and indicators, analysis)

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Knowledge Translation

• Tools for accountability

• Clearinghouse of resources

• Capacity building initiatives for communities

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Network and Partnership Development

• Constituents of NCA member organizations• Voluntary Sector stakeholders (FCM, CCRC etc.)• Think Tanks (Caledon, CPRN, etc.)• Researchers and Academic Institutions (CIAR, Centres of

Excellence, Child Care Resource Unit U of T, etc.) • Agencies (CIHI, CIHR)• Government initiatives (UEY, NLSCY, Early Years

Ontario, etc.)• Provincial/Regional Children’s Networks (First Call,

Calgary Children’s Network, etc)• Governments (all levels)

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Tracking Progress

• Consistent framework for developing indicators based on the “right questions” (for sectors and communities)

• National “monitoring” initiatives (supporting existing initiatives within a collaborative strategy that addresses gaps)

• Facilitation of processes to assist communities in articulating objectives and tracking progress

• Co-ordinating data collection and analysis

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Reporting

• Pan-Canadian public education strategy• Developing a series of national reports• Tools and template for the “story” to be

used by different stakeholders• Catalyst role for telling of community and

sub-sector stories• Assist communities in data interpretation

and communications of the “story”

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Mobilizing for Change

• Facilitate dialogue across sector on broad policy implications

• Develop tools for communities to give meaning to their stories

• Facilitating collaborative strategies for improving the lives of children

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Concrete achievements

Within the first five years:• Accountability Framework – includes foundational set of questions

and national level indicators• Clearinghouse for data and information – from local to pan-Canadian• National Data Strategy – qualitative and quantitative• Series of National Reports – “Story of Canada’s Children” • Accountability Tools – to enable and build capacity for community

initiatives• Knowledge Transfer Networks – multi-disciplinary and cross-

sectoral• Resource Bank on Accountability – from expertise to information

products

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Roles of the “Council”

• Facilitator/Co-ordinator

• Bridger

• Catalyst

• Capacity-builder

• Broker consensus

• Funder of key accountability initiatives

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Operating Principles

• Holistic and asset-based approaches• Respects diverse sources of knowledge• Includes child and youth engagement• Builds on existing initiatives and infrastructure• Collaborative • Transparency• Community-based• Inclusive

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Model of the “Council”

• Voluntary sector driven • Consortium – “distributed organization”• Links research, practice and policy through

sustained networks• Support existing initiatives and infrastructure

Note: Will be informed but not limited by an exploration of existing models

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Role of the National Children’s Alliance

• Alliance is positioned to play the leadership role in the development of the Council

• Potential for an ongoing relationship with the Council – Alliance could ensure effective partnerships and that the Council is voluntary sector driven through an oversight function

• Alliance could ensure inclusion in the ongoing processes of the Council