20 research outputs found
Leveraging the sport participation legacy of the London 2012 Olympics: Senior managers’ perceptions
The purpose of this study was to understand how a sports mega event (SME) was leveraged to try and increase participation, through the investigation of national governing bodies (NGBs) opinions and atti- tudes. Critical realism (CR) was used as a tool to aid understanding of leveraging and legacy conceptualisation, through an empirical investiga- tion. An extensive, mixed method online survey was conducted post London 2012 with senior staff members of NGBs, the main delivery agent chosen to support the participation initiatives associated with the London 2012 Olympics. This research provides valuable findings surrounding the use of CR as a tool to investigate legacy creation, whilst at the same time offering insights to enhance the policy implementation process within the sports development sector. The importance of com- munication, competitive nature of sports system, media, club engage- ment, organisational capacity and monitoring and evaluation were highlighted, which provided useful insights into the multidimensional constructs that can aid future leveraging strategies prior to hosting SMEs
Public ICT Innovations: A Strategic Ambiguity Perspective
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in the Journal of Information Technology . The definitive publisher-authenticated version, RAVISHANKAR, M.N., 2013. Public ICT innovations: a strategic ambiguity perspective. Journal of Information Technology, 28 (4), pp. 316 - 332, is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/jit.2013.18Public Information and Communications Technology (ICT) innovations are seen as having
the potential to usher in a new era of technology-enabled models of governance in emerging
economies. While it may be desirable for the implementation of such innovations to be
underpinned by precise planning, structure and clarity, policy implementers in emerging
economies are confronted instead by situations where ambiguous goals and means are
standard. This paper considers high levels of ambiguity as a relatively enduring and intrinsic
aspect of public ICT innovations in emerging economies. Drawing on an ethnographic study
of Bangalore one, an innovative public ICT project implemented in Bangalore, India, the
paper examines how strategic ambiguity is deployed by key public actors to chart the
course of the implementation process and to steer it towards reasonable outcomes.
Theoretically, the paper suggests that although strategic ambiguity is a precarious and
unsettling condition in general, it can work effectively in contexts that are reasonably tolerant
of ambiguous norms. The findings of the study also present arguments for why evaluation
mechanisms need to be fundamentally reframed in order to assess the extent of
implementation success of public ICT innovations in emerging economies
Stakeholder Mapping as an Assessment Framework for Policy Implementation
In this article we develop a `Stakeholder MappingÂż approach to ex-ante policy evaluation. The proposed framework helps to assess policy implementation activities by applying several tests to evaluate the completeness, non-redundancy, proper assignment and internal consistency of a policy design. We illustrate the method by applying it to the analysis of e-commerce policy in Iran. We conclude by assessing the strengths and weaknesses of the approach