Navigating Governance Tensions to Enhance the Impact of Partnerships with the Private Sector for the SDGs
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Problem Statement
1.2. Research Objectives
2. Research Approach
2.1. Qualitative Research Synthesis
2.2. Method of Synthesis
- (1)
- Key insights on the understanding and assessment of the impact of PPPDs in the academic literature were reviewed. The first search focused on the Scopus database as principal search system due to its multidisciplinary nature and its retrieval qualities [29]. The search was limited to the following subject areas: social sciences, agricultural sciences, environmental sciences, business management and accounting, and economics. Since the first donor-driven PPPD programs emerged in early 2000, the search period was defined as being between 2000 and 2020.We used the following keyword combinations:Partnership AND “development cooperation” AND impact (21 hits)Partnership AND “international development” AND impact (77 hits)Partnership AND “development policy” AND impact (51 hits)Cross-sector partnership AND impact (56 hits)The titles of all hits were scanned and when in doubt, the abstracts were read. We only selected publications that discuss partnerships with business involvement in development cooperation, or publications that discuss the impact of cross-sector partnerships in the broader context of sustainable development. We did not include very specific impact areas (e.g., climate change or gender). Articles that focused on public-private partnerships for infrastructure development and intra-sector partnerships (e.g., international NGOs and their local counterpart or government-government partnerships, or research-policy partnerships) were dismissed. Additional articles were found through snowballing techniques (pursuing the references of references and checking citations of respective articles). In total, the search identified 10 relevant publications discussing partnerships with private sector involvement in development cooperation. In addition, we identified 13 publications providing insights into the impact of cross-sector partnerships for sustainable development.
- (2)
- Knowledge on PPPDs is mainly discussed in ‘gray literature’, i.e., in “the diverse and heterogeneous body of material available outside, and not subject to, traditional academic peer-review processes” [30]. Including gray literature broadened our research scope to more relevant studies, thereby providing a more complete view of available evidence. We applied the same key-word combinations as in the academic literature search in two databases (google and google scholar). In addition, we searched repositories of organizations that are experts in the field of PPPDs (e.g., the Donor Committee for Enterprise Development). We selected 10 key documents that explicitly focused on the impact and results of efforts of partnerships and programs with the private sector of bilateral development agencies.
- (3)
- The third search focused on evaluation reports of partnership programs of various development agencies. We selected reports that focus on PPPD programs and not on other type of collaborations such as business-to-business programs, or other forms of private sector engagement. In addition, our aim was to capture a wide variety of results from diverse agencies instead of zooming into a specific impact area (e.g., inclusive green growth or gender). It is noteworthy how little evidence of significant evaluations of PPPDs exists [31] or is publicly available. We identified the following three reports that fit our criteria (see Table 1).
3. Findings: Five M&E Challenges for Capturing Impacts of PPPDs
3.1. Time-Span: PPPDs Assess Short-Term Tangible Outputs of Activities Instead of Long-Term Changes
3.1.1. Focus on Immediate Results
3.1.2. Focus on Performance
3.2. Ambitions: PPPDs Have a Transformative Ambition but They Struggle to Capture Multiple Direct and Indirect Changes
3.2.1. Various Impact Levels
3.2.2. Focus on Direct Results
3.2.3. Unclear and Ambitious Objectives
3.3. Alignment of Partner’s Accountability Requirements in PPPD M&E System Is a Challenge
3.3.1. Goal Alignment Challenges
3.3.2. Diverse Perspectives on Function of M&E
3.3.3. Financial and Development Additionality
3.4. Added Value: PPPDs Need to Demonstrate Their Value beyond Project Results
3.5. Relational M&E Practices: PPPDs Require M&E Practices that Include Equity, Participatory Methods and Flexibility
3.5.1. Equity
3.5.2. Participatory M&E Approaches
3.5.3. Flexibility
4. Discussion and Approach: Dealing with Two Contradictory Logics
4.1. Two (Seemingly) Contradictory Logics and the Emerging Tension
4.1.1. Control Approach
4.1.2. Collaboration Approach
4.2. Bridging the Divide between Both Logics for Improved Impact Understanding and Assessment
4.3. Practical Application: Navigating the Governance Tension for Impact Understanding and Assessment
5. Conclusions and Further Research
- PPPDs assess short-term tangible outputs of activities instead of long-term changes
- PPPDs have a transformative ambition but they struggle to capture multiple direct and indirect changes
- PPPDs M&E systems are challenged to align individual partners’ accountability requirements
- PPPDs need to demonstrate their value beyond project results
- PPPDs require M&E practices that embrace equity, participatory methods and flexibility
Avenues for Future Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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PPPD Program | Assessment Type | Evaluator | Date |
---|---|---|---|
develoPPP.de program (German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development) | Evaluation | German Institute for Development Evaluation (Deval) [14] | 2017 |
Facility for Sustainable Entrepreneurship and Food Security (FDOV) (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands) | Mid-term review | Royal Tropical Institute (KIT) [32] | 2016 |
Public-Private Partnerships & Global Development Alliances (U.S. Agency for International Development) | Evaluation | USAID [33] | 2008 |
Control Approach | Collaboration Approach | |
---|---|---|
Starts from several assumptions about partnering impact and aims to minimize risks that may hamper the achievement of impact | Impact logic | Understands impact as emerging in the process of partnering and dependent on the context |
Accountability | Reason | Learning |
Assessing a project’s performance | Goal/Rationale | Aims to reflect on whether the ‘right’ will be achieved. Generating insights for improved action. Facilitating mutual learning between actors. Supporting reflexivity |
Feedback to (single) organization (often the funder) on how money was spent and whether objectives were reached | Outcome/result | Enhancing a partnership to recognize and respond to change as well as to direct change |
Accomplish the needs and requirements of one organization (e.g., funder)Accountability of partners towards this single organization | Ownership | Accomplish the requirements of the collective (and towards beneficiaries) |
Financial accountability; project output (predefined indicators) | Focus | Collaborative capacity and relationship |
Single organization-led: Principal-agent | Decision-making | Collaboration-led: Stewardship |
Single level; result measurement based on predefined indicators; use of established methodologies | Method | Holistic approach; multi-level; open and flexible approach; context-specific |
Little/no stakeholder participation;external independent consultant | Involvement | Multi-actor approach based on stakeholder participation |
Timely performance informationLess flexibility of monitoring approach | Timeliness | Flexible when learning is required |
Use information for program improvement and organizational purposes | Usability of information | Learning for long-term relationship; transparency; sharing of lessons learned to enhance knowledge around partnering |
Partnerships may be stuck in their impact promises and face challenges of changing realities (lack of flexibility) | Challenges | Impact assessment may tend to be too loose and unmanageable, resulting in M&E without a clear focus or even learningResource intensive |
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Pfisterer, S.; Van Tulder, R. Navigating Governance Tensions to Enhance the Impact of Partnerships with the Private Sector for the SDGs. Sustainability 2021, 13, 111. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13010111
Pfisterer S, Van Tulder R. Navigating Governance Tensions to Enhance the Impact of Partnerships with the Private Sector for the SDGs. Sustainability. 2021; 13(1):111. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13010111
Chicago/Turabian StylePfisterer, Stella, and Rob Van Tulder. 2021. "Navigating Governance Tensions to Enhance the Impact of Partnerships with the Private Sector for the SDGs" Sustainability 13, no. 1: 111. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13010111
APA StylePfisterer, S., & Van Tulder, R. (2021). Navigating Governance Tensions to Enhance the Impact of Partnerships with the Private Sector for the SDGs. Sustainability, 13(1), 111. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13010111