It’s impossible to imagine life nowadays without cooperation in chains. More and more social issues demand a multi-disciplinary approach. In the past we used to create a new organisation for each new problem; new institutions, with new stakes, for, at times, very specific target groups. Chain cooperation (cooperation between multiple actors) seeks to overcome that problem by bringing the relevant parties together to jointly solve the client’s demand or tackle a social issue. However, the big problem of many chains is the lack of decisiveness, and commitment to the cooperation, or to the time-consuming consultative structures. In this publication Arjan van Venrooy and Léon Sonnenschein describe a new organisational form that offers a solution to this: the chain unit. This solution has been tested in the difficult day-to-day practice of the fight against juvenile crime and the handling of persistent offenders in Amsterdam, tackling juvenile unemployment in Rotterdam and handling multi- poblem families in Enschede. All in the Netherlands.
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Getting to grips with public chains and multi actor networks
1. Arjan van Venrooy and Léon Sonnenschein
CHAIN UNITS: GETTING TO
GRIPS WITH PUBLIC CHAINS
Practice as the source of inspiration
commissie innovatie openbaar bestuur
2.
3. CHAIN UNITS: GETTING TO
GRIPS WITH PUBLIC CHAINS
Practice as the source of inspiration
5. Foreword
We proudly present this publication of the Commission for Innovation in Public Administration, InAxis, and Verdonck, Klooster & Asso-
ciates called: ‘Chain units: Getting to grips with public chains’ to you. It is a special booklet describing a new concept of organising
chain cooperation based on practical examples, which have developed in our cities Amsterdam, Rotterdam and Enschede, separately
from one another. Our three cities are all wrestling with complex issues in the field of persistent offenders, juvenile unemployment
and multi-problem families. These issues are often interrelated, but part of the problem is that there are many different agencies all
dealing with persistent offenders, juveniles or families in one way or another. Even we, as administrators, can sometimes barely see the
wood for the trees. Restructuring in this forest of agencies is a tempting thought, and may even be necessary, but could never be the
only solution. It so happens that, quite often, very different bodies are involved, such as education, the police, welfare work and social
services, which, from their specific knowledge and skills, have to make a contribution to the solution of the problem.
Over the last years, the concept of ‘chain cooperation’ has become a fashionable one for organizing the cooperation amongst this
multiplicity of agencies. This has not always been successful. Good initiatives too often get bogged down in noncommitment, or
consultation structures which reduce motivation. All three contributors to this publication have searched for solutions to this problem;
in Amsterdam with the Chain Units for Juvenile Crime and Persistent Offenders, in Rotterdam with the Open Window for Juveniles, a
project for the young unemployed, and in Enschede with the District Care Teams for the handling of multi-problem families. We have
scored some success with these approaches; InAxis, the Commission for Innovation in Public Administration, recognised the connective
thread throughout these solutions and, in partnership with Verdonck, Klooster & Associates, has described it for you in this booklet.
The essence can be summarized easily: create a joint team with representatives from the main chain partners. Give a mandate to this
team to make binding decisions about the desired approach and make sure that they can enter into binding agreements with the field.
This sounds simpler than it is. It’s the administrators who have the responsibility of entering into agreements at an administrative level
and, where necessary, to keep the chain partners alert. This is not something you can do ‘as a sideline’. It requires maintenance, atten-
tion and the willingness to invest time. If you have this willingness, then this booklet is meant for you!
Job Cohen, Ivo Opstelten, Peter den Oudsten
7. Table of Contents
1 Introduction 7
1.1 Immediate cause 7
1.2 Booklet marker 7
2 What is chain directorship? 9
2.1 What are chains? 9
2.2 What is chain directorship? 10
2.3 An outline of the practical problems for which a chain approach can offer solutions. 10
2.4 Complexity of chain cooperation and chain directorship 10
3 Getting to grips with public chains: the chain units 13
3.1 What is a chain unit? 13
3.2 Working method of chain units 15
3.3 Controlling and dividing tasks, powers and responsibilities: Every man to his trade! 18
3.4 Difference between front and back office: Who directs whom? 19
3.5 Articulating and controlling demand 20
3.6 ‘Concrete’ chain versus chain flexibility 20
3.7 Shared information infrastructure: shared services for flexible chains 21
4 Success and failure factors of chain units in actual practice 23
4.1 Politico-administrative aspects 24
4.2 Financial and economic aspects 27
4.3 Legal aspects 28
4.4 Socio-organisational aspects 28
4.5 Content related aspects 30
4.6 Information and technology aspects 30
5 Conclusion 33
6 Literature 35
8. The Commission accepted all three applica-
tions, as they wanted to try out a new solu-
tion to a persistent problem which occurred
in many chains: the lack of commitment and
decisiveness.
9. Introduction
1
1.1 Immediate cause
In 2005, InAxis received three applications for experiments to be conducted in the field of chain cooperation, namely: ‘Amsterdam chain units’
on the handling of persistent juvenile offenders, the ‘Rotterdam Open Window for Juveniles’ for the tackling of juvenile unemployment, and
the ‘Enschede District Care Teams’ for the handling of multi-problem families. The Commission accepted all three applications, as they wanted
to try out a new solution to a persistent problem which occurred in many chains: the lack of commitment and decisiveness. What was special
was that whilst the solutions were tried out in various policy domains, they all revealed many similarities at a conceptual level. It is now three
years later and the experiments are fully fledged. The concept has crystallized and led to this publication: ‘Chain units: getting to grips with
public chains’.
Mindful of our motto, ‘practice as the source of inspiration’, we have described the concept on the basis of the experiences of Amsterdam,
Rotterdam and Enschede. The administrative and organisational aspects of the chain units are central. Through this publication, InAxis wants
to offer administrators who are working in municipalities and social organisations in the public domain, a challenging perspective on organis-
ing chains that are concentrated on complex social issues, more effectively. Additionally, the booklet offers a comprehensive inside view of
the process of establishing this method, which the trailblazers or project leaders who are given the task of setting up a chain unit, can take
advantage of.
1.2 Booklet Marker
In Chapter 2 we will discuss the concepts ‘chains’ and ‘chain directorship’ in more detail and provide insight into the complexity of chain coop-
eration and chain directorship. In Chapter 3 we will introduce a new organisational set-up for chains, the so-called chain units. We position the
use of chain units as a methodology for getting to grips with public chains. We will also demonstrate how chain units function and illustrate a
few of the important preconditions for their effectiveness. In Chapter 4 we will present a few success and failure factors of chain units based on
the experiences gained in the experiments so far. In Chapter 5 we will end with a few important conclusions.
9
10. “In a chain, autonomous organisations work
together and try to coordinate their activities
for the client’s benefit or for the solution of
complex social issues.”
11. What is chain directorship?
2
2.1 What are chains?
In the various government policy areas, there are many services and products offered by many providers (Central Government, province,
municipality, private and (semi)-public organisations) which, in the main, operate separately from one another. The central question, with
regard to this basic problem of fragmentation, is how policy, implementation and information supply about the complex problem situations of
citizens and companies can be sufficiently coordinated so that effective and client-oriented public services can be provided. How is it possible,
when solving complex social issues, to structure cooperation amongst the organisations which are involved, in a meaningful and effective
way? To offer a solution for this type of question, a number of alliances have emerged over the previous years, which we started calling ‘chain
cooperation’.
Chains and chain directorship highlight cooperation and the process of providing services for clients. They are aimed at connecting the activi-
ties of various organisations and institutions from the public and/or private sector [1]. The chain approach is based on integral management
across organisational boundaries, while the chain is comprised of the links between the duties, responsibilities, powers and roles of separate
organisations [2]. A chain can thus be defined as a ‘coherent sequence of activities of many organisations and individual persons aimed at
a joint product’ [3]. The joint product must not be conceived as a separate product for a certain client, such as, for example, a subsidy or a
permit, but rather as a set of various interconnected activities, products and services which can translate the needs of certain clients and/or
client groups into practice. For example, one could perceive the product ‘safety’ as one which is provided by the judicial operating chain, the
product ‘social security’, as one provided for by the social structure chain through the Work and Income Implementation Structure (SUWI), or
the product ‘care’ as one which is provided by various health care providers in the health care chain. Cooperation between organisations from
various chains is often also necessary to be able to handle complex social issues. Examples of this are the handling of multi-problem families,
and the handling of persistent offenders, and young people who need help and services which are related to training, work and income.
11
12. 2.2 What is chain directorship? there are also juveniles who can take advantage of this situation
In a chain, autonomous organisations work together and try to and cause a nuisance.
coordinate their activities with one another for the client’s benefit
or to solve complex social issues. Controlling a chain (from the Multi-problem families
inside and outside) is a complicated task because of the autonomy Usually, there are many agencies concerned with the handling of
of the parties involved. Consequently, controlling and manag- so-called multi-problem families: ‘father an alcoholic, mother a drug
ing within chains is predominantly about consulting, negotiating addict and son in jail’. Sometimes as many as fifteen care providers
and persuading and not imposing or enforcing. For that reason from every life domain swarm around such a family, and can include
it is referred to as chain directorship, as the terms ‘control’ and (youth care, mental health care, employment & income support
‘management’ have too directive a connotation. Chain directorship agencies, criminal law, education), each of which knows nothing of
can be described as ‘developing (better) services, as experienced the other or what they are doing. The activities of all the bodies
by the client, by inviting the (potential) chain partners to coordi- involved are not tailored to one another, resulting in an insufficient
nate their activities more effectively’ [4].What is essential here is insight into the integral approach to the set of problems which is
the notion of inviting, as opposed to enforcing and imposing. The required. Consequently, the effectiveness of the approach is poor
possibilities of controlling from above are limited when it comes to and promotes ‘shopping behaviour’ (moving around between
chains. services) amongst problem families. Often, these problem families
also cause a lot of nuisance in the neighbourhood.
2.3 An outline of practical prob-
lems for which a chain ap- Persistent offenders
proach can offer solutions. Many different organisations occupy themselves simultaneously with
An outline of the practical problems for which a chain approach can the problems of juvenile crime and persistent offenders, such as the
offer solutions is given below. Youth Care Agency, the Child Care and Protection Board, the Halt
Bureau, the Public Prosecution Service, the Police, the Probation and
Premature school-leavers and unemployed juveniles After-Care Services, and the Municipal Medical and Health Service. In
Several organisations working with, and for the benefit of, prema- addition, there are various organisations carrying out activities for the
ture school-leavers and unemployed juveniles do not collaborate benefit of the young people and persistent offenders at a distance.
properly. Because of this poor level of cooperation, many juveniles, The essence of the fight against juvenile crime and persistent offend-
who need help with their education or work, either fall by the ers is to find the right balance between adequate punishment and
wayside or are approached simultaneously by several organisa- a suitable care programme. As the parties involved work at cross-
tions, in different ways and with different offers. The odds are that purposes, this often hampers the approach and a safe environment
juveniles, for whom it is difficult to find employment, will be sent may be at issue.
from one person to another with all its consequences. Additionally,
12 What is chain directorship?
13. and handling).
• Financial and economic agreements (for example, awarding and
deducting costs and benefits across all the parties concerned).
• Information and communication technological (ICT) agreements (for
example, protocols for exchange of data for the network, use of
shared information systems).
• Informatics agreements (for example, joint data definitions, security,
identification, existence of authentic records).
• Legal agreements (for example, agreements about the protection
of privacy and the application of the Privacy Act).
The complexity of the development and achievement of chain
cooperation is particularly related to the large quantity of agree-
ments which must be entered into in divergent fields amongst
the organisations involved. When everyone has to be in tune with
COOPERATION FROM MANY DIFFERENT DISCIPLINES MAKES HARMONISATION COMPLEX.
everyone else in each of the six areas of agreement, there will
always be a high degree of complexity such as this, no matter what.
If you add the autonomy of the parties involved and the compart-
2.4 Complexity of chain cooperation mentalised control and financing, to it, it is hardly a surprise that
and chain directorship bringing about chain cooperation and chain directorship is a
In chain cooperation and chain directorship, the organisations enter complex task.
into agreements amongst themselves about the progress and the
organisation of their work processes, and the way they tailor these
to one another or reorganise them (organisational agreements).
But entering into agreements on process organisation and process
harmonisation is not enough. In other areas, too, the organisations
concerned, enter into agreements amongst themselves. These
agreements refer to various agreements, to wit [5] and [6]:
• Politico-administrative agreements (for example, the protection of
certain values of organisations, looking after the shared and chain
purpose versus individual institutional interests and purposes).
• Substantive agreements (for example, agreements about approach
What is chain directorship? 13
14. The client’s diagnosis and the articulation of
his/her demands take place in the chain units.
The decision-making process in the chain unit
vis-à-vis the handling of the problem situation
is normative for how matters will be handled.
15. Getting to grips with public chains:
the chain units
3
3.1 What is a chain unit?
It happens far too often that the efforts made to achieve chain cooperation do not produce the desired results. Actual practice proves to be
hard to manage. Over the years, however, people have gained some experience with various forms of chain cooperation and chain director-
ship. The most important problems occurring with chain cooperation are [6]:
• Compartmentalised control and financing of administrative agencies.
• Lack of integral chain coordination at administrative level.
• Lack of integral chain coordination at case level.
• Lack of clarity in authority structures.
• The large number of autonomous organisations involved in the cooperation.
• The high degree of functional specialisation of the organisations involved.
• The involvement of various administrative tiers.
In the past three years Amsterdam, Rotterdam and Enschede have gained experience in overcoming a number of these problems. A new form
of organising chains has originated from it, which we call the ‘chain unit’. On the basis of these experiences we define chain units as follows:
A chain unit is an organisational form in which several chain partners collaborate and have the primary processes in their own parent organisa-
tions run from one shared work process. What distinguishes the chain units vis-à-vis other forms of cooperation is that the decision-making
process is binding for all the partners in the chain unit.
The client’s diagnosis and the articulation of his/her demands take place in the chain units. The decision-making process in the chain unit
vis-à-vis the handling of the problem situation is normative for how matters will be handled. Although the partners retain their individual
responsibilities [usually embedded in a legal framework], they agree on the necessity of putting these responsibilities into action by integrating
15
16. the activities of the chain partners into one common organi-
sational unit, with one work process. Subsequently, the chain
unit acts as the commissioning authority for all the organisa-
tions involved in the chain. Meanwhile, experiments have been
conducted in various situations with various forms of the chain
unit. The first experiences are positive.
Enschede: District Care Teams for Multi-problem Families
In the Enschede approach to multi-problem families, one
team is created, the chain unit, from which the determina-
tion and coordination of assistance and restraint takes place. IN A CHAIN UNIT THE PARTNERS GO THROUGH ONE COMMON WORK PROCESS.
Representatives of the various life domains are represented
in the team, such as juvenile care, mental healthcare, work &
income, criminal law and education, i.e. the Social Assistance the chain unit, is to prevent school absenteeism and to tackle the
Foundation for care and welfare problems, the police for safety problems of juvenile unemployment. In Rotterdam, various urban
and crime problems, Tactus for addiction problems, the Service services, administrative agencies, sub-municipal projects and the
for Social Development, the Public Prosecution Service for the link business community are active in supporting juveniles. The Open
to the judicial chain, and Mediant for psychiatric problems. The Window for Juveniles agency, in which the activities of the primary
attention of the team is focused on the concurrence of problems. cooperative partners JOS (Youth, Education, Society), CWI (connec-
This creates a good overall view of all the related sub-problems. tion to the labour market) and SoZaWe (care, entry-counselling
The team draws up a plan of action for each problem family, with stage and income) have been bundled together, covers the entire
objectives, results, priorities and an action plan. In this way, all the field of operations in the area of work, income and education. Thus
‘street-level-bureaucrats’ are prevented from working too diligently, the networks of the participating services are all assembled under
but, most of all, from working at cross-purposes. All the efforts are the direction of Open Window. Open Window is a shared front
converted into coordinated, collective and productive action. At office, which houses the back offices as well, in a recognisable and
the same time Enschede discontinued all the other consultation specifically equipped location. Open Window for Juveniles oper-
structures. The District Care Team is the central axis in the support ates as a commissioning authority for the chain.
structure of an area.
Amsterdam: Juvenile Crime Chain Units
Rotterdam: Open Window for Juveniles The Juvenile Crime Chain Units in Amsterdam are alliances of
The goal of the Open Window for Juveniles project in Rotterdam, organisations who are engaged in the fight against juvenile crime
16 Getting to grips with public chains: the chain units
17. and persistent offending. ‘The object of the chain units is to create tions work with one another. The parent organisations operate as a
a safer living environment for the residents of the Amsterdam sort of skin surrounding the chain unit, performing services for the
Amstelland police region by driving down juvenile crime and effect- chain unit in their capacity as ‘contractors’. The decision-making
ing a personal-sphere approach to adult persistent offenders. It is process with regard to the service delivery route for the client takes
characteristic of the working method of the chain units that they place in the chain unit. The chain unit acts as a commissioning
ensure a fast, consistent and efficient handling of (juvenile) criminal authority of the (parties in the) chain.
matters by offering a coherent approach’[7]. It is in the chain
units that the decision-making process takes place on all juvenile Additionally, we can also distinguish a second skin of organisations
criminal matters, from first offenders to hard core offenders. The surrounding the chain units. These are organisations that do not
proper harmonisation of adequate punishment and a suitable care participate in the alliance, but whose services are often very desir-
programme is the goal. The chain unit is partly a combination of able, depending on the specific set of problems. The chain units
the existing Relief Team for Juveniles, the Judicial Authority in keep in close contact with these organisations as well. They do not
the Neighbourhood and the Judicial Case Consultation, but it take part in the binding decision-making process, but are consulted
also contains new elements as well. In the chain unit the following in specific circumstances.
parties work together, inter alia: the Halt Bureau, the Youth Care
Agency, the municipality of Amsterdam, the Municipal Medical and 3.2 Working method of chain units
Health Service, the Jellinek Clinic, the Salvation Army, the Public Juvenile Crime Chain Units
Prosecution Service, the Child Care and Protection Board, the In the Juvenile Crime Chain Units in Amsterdam, a juvenile who
Amsterdam-Amstelland Regional Police, and the Dutch Probation gets in trouble with the police because of a punishable offence, will
Service. As all the partners work together at one location, all the receive a response tailored to his or her personal circumstances.
information about the juveniles and their circumstances converge. This concerns juveniles at various stages in their criminal careers,
That’s how a burgeoning criminal career can be quickly nipped in from first offenders and petty criminals to hard core juveniles. The
the bud and all the work done is offender-focused. Additionally, efforts of the partners who are collaborating with each other to
adult persistent offenders are personally handled in the chain units. support the juveniles who have been in trouble with the police
The quality and the speed of the response to juvenile crime has are bundled within the chain units. The central direction in the
increased by coordinating the working methods of the participating chain units in Amsterdam is in the hands of the Public Prosecution
organisations even more tightly and making them run more closely Service. Every juvenile who commits a punishable offence is report-
in parallel. ed by the police to the chain unit. Depending on the nature of the
offence, either the public prosecutor on duty takes a decision, or, a
In summary referral is drawn up for the examining magistrate or the court.
It’s in the chain unit that the representatives of various organisa- With first offenders or petty criminals, the decision as to whether
Getting to grips with public chains: the chain units 17
18. any care or assistance should be given is considered within the court. The shared housing and the joint working method promote
chain unit. Juveniles who have committed criminal offences before the group process and offer insight into one another’s responsibili-
and who are known to the chain unit, have their background ties.
information with regard to social assistance and crime, recorded in
a personal file, the so-called chain chart. The chain chart is submit- Handling of multi-problem families
ted to the public prosecutor and (juvenile) court and recommends In Enschede the chain unit has drawn up a number of working
what punishment might be imposed and care-giving measures be documents and a joint working process for the handling of multi-
offered. problem families. The working process consists of clear-cut steps,
a clear division of duties, powers and responsibilities, a certain
In addition to the partners within the chain unit, cooperation also degree of standardisation, and, at the same time, enough freedom
exists with external partners. These partners are not physically and mutual trust amongst the collaborating partners. As a result of
part of the chain units, but they do carry out work for the benefit the working process protocol and the filling in of a comprehensive
of juveniles and persistent offenders who have the chain units’ intake form (the ‘life domains scan’), followed by the drawing up of
attention. Each chain unit has a care coordinator who supervises a customised plan of action, it is now clear what the client system’s
the harmonisation of supply and demand with the city districts. (multi-problem family’s ) problem is, what should be done with it
The care coordinator, furthermore, keeps in contact with the staff and who should head up the implementation of the intervention.
in the field of education, youth care, youth work and other local
(youth) projects. No longer is the offence being punished, but one The District Care Team is led by an independent team leader
now looks for the most suitable response to a juvenile slipping into from the municipality and consists of representatives of the chain
crime. partners who are involved and who have received a mandate from
their parent organisations. The decisions made by the team are
The joint approach is based on an intensive exchange of informa- binding. The team leader has a deciding vote if there is no agree-
tion, compiling so-called personal files, preparing scenarios for indi- ment amongst the parties. In this way the speed of the intervention
vidual persistent offenders and treatment route supervision. A core is increased, the number of care providers is reduced per case and
role of the chain units is to deal with all the matters involved when the problem re. lack of commitment is out of the process.
a young person is a suspect. And with ‘dealing with’ we mean both
the settlement by a criminal court and the care programme that In the District Care Teams two types of processes are recognised:
might be necessary. The central activities are: collecting information 1. The case-oriented process re. the handling of a set of multi-
to facilitate decisions and aftercare monitoring; taking decisions problems. After a referral has been received about a problematic
(concerning settlement and care); and preparing the scenarios in case, the team leader of the District Care Team appoints a problem
support of decisions taken by the public prosecutor’s office and the holder. After this assignment the problem holder then organises
18 Getting to grips with public chains: the chain units
19. a Multi-disciplinary Consultation Meeting (MDCO). This MDCO Rotterdam Open Window for Juveniles
consists of a ‘pool’ of professionals from the affiliated agencies who The Open Window for Juveniles consists of a front and a back
are deployed for the benefit of a case, supervised by the problem office: the front office is occupied by consultants from SoZaWe,
holder. A plan of action is drawn up in the MDCO to handle the JOS and CWI; and offers information about education, trainee-
set of multi-problems. The team leader of the District Care Team is ships, income, work and assisted working, making it available to the
always present at the first MDCO, to ensure quality management. target group. The front office consultants conduct a clearly struc-
The problem holder, however, is the one in charge. The District tured intake interview with the juvenile and draw up a programme
Care Team adopts the plan of action and decides whether a case profile, which is then sent to the back office. The cooperation
can be closed, whether it must be entered on the parallel list, or pertains to:
whether extra efforts are still required. The District Care Team - Substantial aspects of, amongst other things, a joint intake process,
convenes every month. In practice this implies that, following a a diagnosis and drawing up a programme profile.
referral, the District Care Team’s team leader plots certain actions - Making vacancies, work placements and educational possibilities
and it is often only afterwards that he or she submits these to the accessible to juveniles.
District Care Team. In the District Care Team the problems are - Linking data files and exchanging information on clients.
viewed and analysed from the partners’ own expertise but analysis - Following the juveniles’ progress by monitoring the programme
does not stop at the boundaries of an individual’s own discipline. profile drawn up in the front office, in order to reach the objective
Five life domains are represented in the District Care Team. For of the Open Window for Juveniles, namely: achieving economic
example, the life domain ‘Living’ is represented by one corporation, independence.
but this corporation is also authorised to take decisions on behalf
of the other corporations. Initially, the back office consists of offices for the young of SoZaWe,
2. The policy-based process re. the handling of a set of multi- CWI and the RMC [Regional Notification and Coordination Centre].
problems. In the District Care Team one discusses cases that may The ultimate back office is an organised network of agencies which
give rise to a change in working methods, terms and institutions is wider than the cooperative partners SoZaWe, CWI and DSO
involved, or that must be passed on as district referrals to the urban [Rotterdam Urban Education Service], with which agreements are
district manager. If desired, one can also discuss specific cases in made about the programme to be executed, the registration, and
more detail. The objective is to improve the case-oriented process the feedback given to the front office. This feedback is crucial for
and to adjust it, wherever necessary. Decisions about adjusting the the monitoring function to be well implemented.
process are taken in a steering committee which convenes twice
a year under the chairmanship of the municipality. In this commit-
tee the core partners discuss the working of the chain and make
proposals for improvements.
Getting to grips with public chains: the chain units 19
20. 3.3 Controlling and dividing tasks,
powers and responsibilities:
Every man to his trade!!
The chain unit: commissioning authority of the chain
The professionals in the chain unit are all-rounders and work on
the basis of one work process. The supervision rests with the
chain unit, which acts as a ‘commissioning authority’ and moni-
tors the development of the provision of services. The back
offices of the chain unit partners act as principal contractors in
this respect. Each chain unit has a director, someone who takes
the responsibility and who is capable, competent and accepted;
harmonisation and integration takes place within the chain unit,
whilst, simultaneously, the parent organisations are questioned
sharply about their core duties.
Initiator, director and binding decision-making THE TEAM LEADER DOES NOT INVOLVE HIM OR HERSELF IN SUBTANTIAL MATTERS, BUT
In the Rotterdam Open Window for Juveniles and in the IS MAINLY A LIAISON PERSON.
handling of multi-problem families in Enschede, the initiator
and director is the municipality. The municipality conducts the responsibilities and the deputies of the organisations in the
supervision and the coordination. The municipality has an inte- chain unit continue to be part of the parent organisations legally.
gral stake, it is impartial, and has an overview of the life domains However, at the same time, the decision-making process in the
concerned. In Amsterdam too, the initiative for the Juvenile Crime chain unit is binding on all parties, which implies that the represent-
chain units was taken by the municipality. However, the central atives of participating organisations can bind their own organisa-
direction in the chain units in Amsterdam is in the hands of the tions to any agreements made within the chain unit. It is, therefore,
Public Prosecution Service. The Public Prosecution Service, as necessary that these representatives are authorised by their parent
the chain director, looks for a good mix between punishment and organisations to make binding statements. Participation in the chain
care, along with the chain partners, so that a quick intervention is unit without a mandate is meaningless. The representatives must
possible and the juveniles are prevented from sliding further down have scope for action at an individual case level.
the dwindling spiral. The Child Care and Protection Board holds the
case directorship over minors in Amsterdam. Despite this central Definition of duties and escalation levels
direction, the participating organisations retain their individual An important principle for working in chain units is the razor-sharp
20 Getting to grips with public chains: the chain units
21. demarcation of duties, roles and powers. For that reason Enschede does not tamper with the existing responsibilities of the participat-
deliberately refused to choose an approach which, ultimately, ing organisations, nor does it carry out the work of the participating
left a single care provider with the responsibility for one family or organisations. The participating organisations retain their inde-
person. Enschede chose instead to harmonise the approach inside pendence and deputies from the organisations continue to be part
the chain unit, in this case the District Care Team so each profes- of the parent organisation legally. They fully retain all the duties
sional retained his/her own duties. There is, however, one problem (often of a statutory nature) which they already had. Each partner,
holder/ owner. Each parent organisation is questioned rigorously and not the chain unit, has the responsibility for carrying out the
about its core duties and responsibilities. It is crystal-clear who is duties. Various matters have been set out as protocol to safeguard
responsible for what and what all the partners can expect from one structure and security. Supervision, for that matter, includes more
another. The independent team leader has a coordinating role in than just coordination: agreements are made with the participat-
this structure, and a mandate to take binding decisions granted by ing organisations about the level and nature of the participation
the other organisations involved. In the meantime, the chain unit (Service Level Agreements). The management of the chain unit has
in Enschede has become a fixed feature of the existing structure of a co-deciding vote concerning the personnel who work in a unit
the municipality. The team leader does not deal with the specifics on behalf of the participating organisations. The staff must be able
of problems, but acts as a process coordinator. The team leader is to reason from an offender-focused approach at minimum (and
above all a ‘liaison’ person. He or she connects the staff members therefore, not primarily from the point of view of their own organi-
of all the different organisations, the operational level of work to sations), they must also be strongly focused on cooperation and be
the administrative level and the various separate duties necessary able to forward the decision-making process at chain level back to
to implement the plan into one coordinated process aimed at the their own organisation.
handling of multi-problem families.
3.4 Difference between front and
There are two types of escalation in Enschede. The first relates to back office: Who directs
the seriousness of the set of problems. Enschede has the option whom?
of ‘scaling up’ entrenched and very heavy cases to an intervention If the full provision of services is taken into account, the chain units
team operating at a higher level; here too the municipality fulfils a can be considered as front office and the parent organisations
central, leading role. The second type of escalation pertains to the behind them as back office. Both the front office and the back
monitoring and performance of agreements made by the partners office conduct actions that form part of the total provision of serv-
involved. If agreements are inadequately performed by one or ices. The place where they separate services, determines which of
several partners, there will be an escalation in the line. At that point the duties and functions are carried out in the front office and what
the line managers of the chain partners involved will be questioned the burden of responsibilities and powers is in the front-office vis-à-
about their duties and responsibilities. In Amsterdam the chain unit vis the full provision of services, compared to the back office. Thus
Getting to grips with public chains: the chain units 21
22. the difference between front and back office is often a difference in the diagnosis is made and set out in a programme profile, which
powers and responsibilities. is transferred to the back office. In some situations the control of
the demand is strengthened by certain types of demand financing.
The relationship between the chain unit and the parent organisa- For instance, Enschede has taken a step towards demand financ-
tions behind them is one of ‘commissioning authority’ versus ing by, on the one hand, making the decision-making process in
‘contractor’. The problem analysis, the intake and the determina- the District Care Team a leading factor in the care provision, and,
tion of the approach take place in the chain unit, the handling takes on the other hand, by linking a budget to the District Care Team
place in the parent organisation. On the basis of their analysis and through which care can be purchased, if desired. The independent
approach, the chain units instruct the parent organisations and team leader has been given a mandate to spend money and to
monitor the progress of the handling of the case. The centre of purchase care with it.
gravity of the provision of services shifts from the parent organisa-
tions to the chain units, In essence, what we have here is a chain 3.6 ‘Concrete’ chain versus chain
reversal. Where, in the past, it was the supply from the back office flexibility
that was decisive for the process of the provision of services, it is An important task of chain units is to remove compartmentalisation
now the citizen’s demand that has become decisive, mapped out and to approach social problems in an integrated way. However,
by the chain units. In practice, it is not so black and white and there even the chain approach can lead to compartmentalisation as,
is, in particular, an interactive game going on between all persons in practice, chains often operate according to a pre-determined
involved in both the front and the back office, geared to the pattern, and chain partners are insufficiently capable of responding
problem situation. to the changing, social problems and the wishes of the citizens.
To be able to respond to these changing, social problems and the
3.5 Articulating and controlling dynamics of the environment, there is a need for a certain degree
demand of flexibility and adaptability in the chains. We are talking much
Consequently, in the chain unit the (client) demand becomes a more in terms of a network organisation here. Whereas the actions
leading factor instead of the (agency) supply. An important job for in a chain often happen according to an established pattern, a
the chain unit is a good analysis of demands and problems. This network will be fluid. It is, actually, a collection of continuously
function is aimed at the ‘question behind the question’, so that the changing and adapting chains. These adaptations are not arbitrary.
entire problem situation can be determined. Subsequently, through Alliances are being created in accordance with existing wishes and
a clear articulation of the demand, it can be determined which serv- problems. An example of this is the distinction between a first and
ices and actions are required from which organisation. For example, second skin of organisations surrounding the chain unit which was
in the Open Window for Juveniles in Rotterdam, an integrated described above. The first ‘skin’ of organisations involves the parent
intake assessment is carried out in 8 life domains. After this intake organisations that form a direct part of the alliance. The second
22 Getting to grips with public chains: the chain units
23. ‘skin’ of organisations are more loosely connected to the chain In Enschede VIS2 was selected as an information infrastructure.
unit and are actively deployed by the chain unit depending on the This is intended to be an application with a user-friendly interface,
specific problem situation. The chain unit, therefore, should be which a new care provider or chain partner can connect to without
considered as a pivot in a network of organisations. What is created much trouble. So VIS2 actually functions as a shared service for
is not a new institution, but a form of organisation in which the all the parties involved with the problems of the multi-problem
processes of the collaborating organisations are intertwined and families and offers the desired level of flexibility, as any new partner
connected to each other, leading to a clear-cut provision of services can connect to it. VIS2 facilitates cooperation. Without a client-
for the client. Which partners form a chain unit together depends led system like this, the coordinated approach to multi-problem
on the social issue to be tackled. Chain units, in principle, are families in Enschede would be impossible. At this moment, various
temporary in nature, until an issue has been solved or reduced to VSI2 links to other shared basic provisions are under development,
acceptable proportions. The exact configuration will always change such as the GBA [municipal personal records database], compulsory
and will always depend on the social issue to be solved. education records, and the National Reference Index for Juveniles
at Risk.
3.7 Shared information infrastruc-
ture: shared services for flex-
ible chains
Standardisation and the development of shared basic provisions
are required the most at the level of information supply, in order to
attain this flexibility at an organisational level. The government is
working with an information structure for shared and common use,
and must bid farewell to any fragmented solutions. Standardisation
is a precondition for this and is therefore considered a strategic
theme and not a technical instrument. For the information supply of
the government, this means standardisation and the development
of shared basic provisions in the form of shared services. These are
the data and services that are used by all government bodies and
are equally meaningful to all agencies, irrespective of their policy
areas. Examples of basic provisions such as these are the Basic
Records and DigiD.
Getting to grips with public chains: the chain units 23
24. “In the process of methodology development it is
wise to make use of one another’s strong points.
Most of all, working at the one location provides
a lot of insight into each other’s work and, there-
fore, also offers the possibility of utilizing one
another’s strong points.”
25. Success and failure factors of
chain units in actual practice
4
In this chapter we offer an insight into the key success and failure factors of (the development of) chain units, based on practical experiences in
Enschede, Rotterdam and Amsterdam.
We have classified them according to the categories discussed earlier in this booklet:
• politico-administrative aspects;
• financial and economic aspects;
• legal aspects;
• socio-organisational aspects;
• content related aspects;
• information and communication technological (ICT aspects);
• informatics aspects.
25
26. 4.1 Politico-administrative aspects
Administrative will
A chain unit starts with administrative ambition. The first step
towards a chain unit, therefore, is to answer three questions:
- Do I urgently want to have this social issue solved (administrative
ambition and social urgency)?
- Do I want to take responsibility for ensuring that the chain starts
functioning (administrative input)?
- Do I think that this chain cooperation should not be without
commitment and am I prepared to create the preconditions for that
at an administrative level (administrative commitment)?
If these three questions are answered with an unambiguous ‘yes’,
the administrative will is there and the chain unit is worth consider-
ing.
Stakeholder selection and mobilisation
IF THE ADMINISTRATIVE WILL IS THERE, THE CHAIN UNIT IS WORTH CONSIDERING.
In stakeholder selection, the central question is: with which players
the development of the chain units must be started and which
players are relevant to a possible second skin. A successful arrange-
ment of participating players depends on the correct assessment stakeholders will also actually participate in the development of the
of which players are essential to a joint action and to what extent chain unit. Stakeholders often do not know what they are letting
these players are willing to invest their time and money in the themselves in for and where their participation might lead them, for
development strategy. An important comparative assessment to be example, the impact of participation on their own autonomy and
made is the number of players involved versus the manageability performance. Additionally, most players are usually not interested
of the development strategy. The more players there are, the more in doing ‘preliminary work’, but only become interested in partici-
different interests and perceptions, leading to a greater complexity pation when results are visible and within reach.
of the supervision and manageability.
There are various strategic options possible for mobilising players.
The central issue in stakeholder mobilisation is how to interest 1. The first one involves letting players feel that they are (also)
the relevant players and activate them to support the initiative. problem owners, by making the specific problems clear. The
The selection of stakeholders will not guarantee that these same dependency on the participation of partners in the chain unit is
26 Success and failure factors of chain units in actual practice
27. considerable. If organisations decide not to join in, this could approach, were becoming redundant.
reduce the possibility of a solid approach enormously. Visualise
this. This makes it possible to demonstrate to them the necessity of ‘Working’ approach’ as development strategy
participation. For the approach to the development of a chain unit, it would be
2. A second option is to choose a ‘working’ approach. At first, one best to choose a step-by-step process using a ‘working’ approach.
tries to quickly achieve small results and display these to potential A uniform and centralist approach as regards process and content
partners. The effect and added value of the chain unit are demon- has no chance of succeeding in a politico-administratively complex
strated in actual practice and, in this way, potential partners can be situation of a chain unit, in which so many parties are involved.
invited to participate. Considering the complexity of regulations and work processes,
3. A third strategy is a power strategy. When potential partners and the large number of organisations involved, it is impossible to
depend on other partners, they can be forced to participate in the achieve this through a ‘blue print approach’. An open approach,
alliance. An example of this is the power that municipalities may in which the chain unit is formed by mutual consent, has the best
exercise over organisations that are completely dependent on the chance of succeeding. Work with a growth model, and don’t take
municipality for their financing. any irreversible steps in the initial phase. Additionally, strike a good
balance between top-down and bottom-up development. Bottom-
Amsterdam, Rotterdam and Enschede applied a combination of up allows for the development of major working methods and
these strategies: after the first administrative consultative meetings specific approaches originating from the specific professions. Major
were held (making the problem a common problem), a ‘coalition choices should be made at senior level. By choosing in favour of a
of the willing’ was formed rather quickly, and a ‘working’ approach growth model, it becomes possible to experience first how certain
was adopted. In Rotterdam, they had the advantage of two out things will work out in practice, before the chain unit is developed
of the three partners being municipal services. In Amsterdam, any further. Chain cooperation in and around the chain units is a
the Municipal Executive played an important part, but there was shared learning process.
also the possibility of continuing an existing collaboration in the
handling of ‘Hard Core Youth’. In addition, the municipality made Limited number of mandatory agreements
funds available to get the project off the ground. In Enschede, Of course there is nothing wrong with setting out the administra-
both civil servants and administrators made their best efforts, tive agreements in a covenant or management agreement. But
they got two pilot schemes off the ground, and the cooperation the experiences of Amsterdam, Rotterdam and Enschede teach us
in the District Care Teams was also set out in the regular subsidy that one loses time waiting for a fully worked-out covenant. What’s
agreements. The municipality deployed the subsidy instrument to important most of all is to create a climate of cooperation between
bring about a shift in the focus of a number of participants and to the organisations and the people who work there, at short notice.
restructure a number of consultative structures that, with the new The administrators are essential in this respect. The covenant then
Success and failure factors of chain units in actual practice 27
28. becomes the conclusion of the development process of the chain multi-problem families in Enschede, the Open Window for Juveniles
unit rather than its start. In the covenant a few basic agreements in Rotterdam and the Youth Crime Chain Units in Amsterdam, this
are set out about the (operation of the) chain unit. This covenant was the municipality. The municipalities were seen as the logical
can be considered as a declaration of the intent to jointly develop a party to take on problems like safety, social care and juvenile unem-
chain unit and an integral approach to a set of problems. Additional ployment and were therefore also accepted in their role of bringing
agreements are included in detailed covenants during the further the parties together and initiating the chain approach.
development strategy of the chain unit and the integral approach.
Thus a structure of covenants is created, with a covenant for the The initiator of the chain cooperation doesn’t have to be the same
chain unit as a whole, and detailed covenants for specific subjects. person as the chain director. That role can be fulfilled very well by
another organisation. In the Youth Crime Chain Units in Amsterdam,
Shared vision and clear goals and ambitions the Public Prosecution Service assumed that role, as it was directly
It is important to formulate a shared vision and clear goals and linked to the core duties of the Public Prosecution Service. The
ambitions for the chain unit and the chain approach. This vision naturalness with which these roles will be assumed and fulfilled by
offers an important frame of reference for choices to be made and the organisations depends to a large extent on relationships within
for further elaborations of the shared approach and work proc- and amongst policy domains. In many cases, however, the munici-
esses in the chain unit and chain cooperation. It is also possible to pality will be able to assume these roles. The municipality often has
establish performance indicators and to measure and follow the an integral stake, it is impartial, and has an overview of various life
working of the chain unit and chain cooperation on the basis of domains as well.
clear, concrete and specific goals. Administrative ambitions, vision
and goals can also be put down on paper concisely. For example, Escalation levels
this is how Rotterdam did it: ‘every youngster under 23 has a job, Once the decision has been taken to organise a chain unit, the
attends school or follows an action plan to work.’ Or Amsterdam: administrators, or the senior management of the participating
‘every persistent juvenile offender knows within 24 hours what his organisations, form a steering committee. The people on the steer-
follow-up programme will be.’ ing committee are capable of making decisions by themselves and
of entering into agreements for their organisations. The members
Initiator and chain director of the steering committee jointly direct the (development of the)
One of the basic assumptions in the development of chain units chain unit. They establish the work process, the organisational
is that there is an organisation that considers itself as the agency design, enter into agreements regarding the settlement of costs
responsible for the underlying (social) problems. That organisation and investments and make decisions on matters which the chain
must also be in a position to define that role. This is nearly always unit itself is not capable of solving. Conflicts, too, are settled in the
a politically legitimised government organisation. In the case of the steering committee. This is important to realise. The success of the
28 Success and failure factors of chain units in actual practice
29. and actively influence this network. In this respect it is important
to know what you are selling. A clear concept and view of the
progress of the operation definitely helps.
The chain’s bounds
In even a chain approach, it sometimes appears difficult not to
lapse into compartmentalisation, in this case ‘horizontal compart-
mentalisation’. Sometimes, certain partners are considered by
other partners in the chain unit to be ‘chain-unfriendly’. In these
circumstances it requires energy to persuade the partners that the
agency/agencies in question is/are necessary in order to handle the
problems. In that respect it helps to highlight the set of problems
and to view any possible partners from that angle. Working with
a first and a second ring of cooperative partners, such as in the
handling of multi-problem families in Enschede, is also an incentive
PARTICIPANTS IN CHAIN CO-OPERATION NEED TO TAKE SEVERAL BARRIERS.
to approaching the problems and any possible solutions from a
broader perspective.
chain sometimes calls for sacrifices to be made by one or more of 4.2 Financial and economic aspects
the chain partners. Members of the steering committee must be in As a result of the large number of organisations involved, the
a position to enter into agreements on the above independently. financing of chain activities is a difficult issue. Within the public
The members of the steering committee also play an important, sector the budget is often controlled by a municipality or the
interventionist role within their own parent organisations. They central government. The budgetary systems of the various
assure that the parent organisations cooperate and represent the organisations hardly allow for something like chain-controlling. In
commitment of the senior level of the organisation. the main, one is judged by the output of one’s own products. This
makes it difficult for organisations to continue releasing budgets,
Expectations management also in the event of declining file sizes. These factors, almost by
Expectations management is found to be a key factor. Expectations definition, cause costs and benefits to be apportioned unequally.
run high and there is enormous political pressure, certainly in the A Central Organization for Work and Income that invests in chain
chain units’ initial stage. There are many parties and many interests cooperation to help juveniles at risk to get work or training will
interconnected with each other and it is quite a large task to follow see little of it back in financial terms. The gains usually end up at
Success and failure factors of chain units in actual practice 29
30. the social security office in the form of fewer benefits paid out. It tation of the separate tasks and increasingly more on solving the
requires administrators with vision and guts to opt for solving the problems in the team in an integral way. They are increasingly ‘drift-
social issue, instead of maintaining an institutional interest. ing’ away, as it were, from their colleagues in the parent organisa-
tions. For the parent organisation, participation in the chain unit is
In developing chain units and keeping them operational, one incurs one of their duties, and, in a way, at odds with the other duties. It
roughly three types of costs, to wit (1) costs for the performance of remains difficult for the parent organisations to get enough support
specific, content-related work, (2) supervision costs, and (3) general on a more permanent basis for the chain units within their own
costs, such as computer and housing costs. organisations. Not everyone in the organisation is informed about
participation in the chain units, let alone that the work processes in
It is important to finance the first type of costs from the internal the parent organisations are tailored to it. The representatives of
resources of the participating organisations, based on the recogni-
tion that the activities belong to their own core duties. Where the
chain units strictly exercise core duties, these should be funded
by the organisations themselves. The remaining types of costs are
divided amongst the participating organisations by means of an
allocation formula or financed from external sources such as subsi-
dies from the central government and/or municipality.
4.3 Legal aspects
The protection of privacy in privacy legislation may be a barrier to
the exchange of personal data amongst organisations. In actual
practice, it turns out that this can be taken care of using special
privacy regulations. Examples of this are available, amongst other
things, from the practical cases referred to in this publication.
4.4 Socio-organisational aspects
Relationship between the chain unit versus parent organisations
In practice tensions can arise between the team members in the
chain unit and their parent organisations. The team members
become enthusiastic and involved in the integral approach adopted
by the chain unit. Their focus is increasingly less on the implemen-
THE PEOPLE IN A CHAIN UNIT LOOK DIFFERENTLY AT THE SAME CLIENT; TOGETHER
THEY HAVE A COMPLETE PICTURE.
30 Success and failure factors of chain units in actual practice
31. the parent organisations in the chain units must therefore have a Different cultures and working methods
mandate to be able to take decisions independently and be able to In the chain unit people have to collaborate from different agen-
act upon them. cies, with different cultures, different working methods, and, some-
times, also, different perceptions of the client. A police officer will
Additionally, when developing a new shared work process of the look at a multi-problem family quite differently from a social worker.
chain unit, one should pay proper attention to making connections And someone from the education sector will regard a young person
with the back office processes. One must examine which activities quite differently from someone working in a social security office.
of the various partners will be carried out in the chain unit and In practice arriving at a shared work process and joint action from
which ones will remain with the parent organisations. The basic such a situation is found to be a difficult task. The basic assumption
assumption here is that every organisation reverts to its core duties, behind solving these problems is that one should cooperate, for
and that duties, roles and powers are defined very sharply. Subse- the most part, on the basis of trust, mutual respect and professional
quently, it is of crucial importance that the new work process ties expertise. It is important to visualise the different perspectives on
in with the work processes of the parent organisations concerned, the client and make these productive as the presupposition behind
with no link whatsoever being overlooked. Another possible solu- chain cooperation is that the combined action of these different
tion to maintain communication is to have the staff members of approaches contributes towards the solution of the problem. Expe-
the chain unit work part of their time on location with the parent rience with one another in earlier alliances helps is this respect.
organisations. Additionally, it is important to recognise the significance of team
training sessions and integrated training programmes. Participants
Giving mandates and making decisions have also gained positive experience with chain games, on the
As we said before: participation in the chain unit is meaningless basis of which different ‘blood types’ were put together and the
without a mandate from the representatives of the organisations staff members of the chain unit got to know each other better.
involved in the chain unit. For a decisive chain unit it is necessary
for binding decisions taken in the chain units, to be adhered to by Different control levels
all partners. This implies that the representatives of the participat- It is difficult when organisations are active at different levels and
ing organisations are capable of binding their own organisations have different ways of exercising control. An example of this is
to agreements made within the chain unit. It is, therefore, neces- when two partners are local, but one is managed nationally and is
sary that these representatives are given mandates by their parent also product-driven. This makes it hard to enter into appropriate
organisations to make binding statements and that these mandates agreements at a local level. Bring up any bottlenecks in this field
are set out at an administrative level. at steering committee level as soon as possible and sort them out
there.
Success and failure factors of chain units in actual practice 31
32. Clear and established work processes things, is the mobilisation of professional insight, aimed at improv-
It must be clear to everyone how the work processes in the chain ing and increasing the effectiveness of the interventions. Former
unit run and how these work processes are tailored to the proc- perceptions of one another are readjusted and common interests
esses in the parent organisations. Preferably, the work processes are easier to find.
are set out in a so-called process book. Consequently, it is clear
to all the parties concerned exactly what expectations are and the In the process of methodology development, it is wise to make
amount of time in which certain tasks should be carried out. The use of each other’s strong points. In the main, it is working at one
process book also offers an important induction tool to support location that provides a lot of insight into one another’s work and,
new staff members. This implies that the process book must remain therefore, the possibility of utilizing each other’s strong points as
user-friendly and should not contain too much detail. well. It produces new strategies and approaches.
4.5 Content-related aspects 4.6 Informatics and technological
Professional freedom versus standardisation aspects
In the chain units there is potential conflict between professional ICT: bottleneck and enabler
freedom and standardisation. Various professionals of all types Cooperation in complex chains requires intensive information trans-
and backgrounds, who pride themselves on a certain freedom of actions to be made between the cooperative partners involved. A
action, participate in the chain units. However, a certain degree good information supply is crucial to an integral approach in which
of standardisation in approach and methodology is desirable for several organisations are involved as there is much more informa-
a coordinated integral approach. Standardisation and methodol- tion available about the problem situation and its background. The
ogy teach the professionals to speak each other’s language, make chain unit acts as an information node in that respect. Information
the professional actions transparent, and enable them to act more from various agencies, disciplines and powers is bundled together
effectively as a team in the event of complex problems. and shown over a longer period [8]. ICT should enable the informa-
tion from all the partners involved to be linked, and to process data
The univocal orientation towards the client and the shared from the various partners electronically as much as possible. This
approach within the framework of the chain units create connec- information forms the basis for the coordination and handling of a
tions between people, which also strengthen the connections of the multi-problem situation. Besides the necessity for ICT to ensure a
organisations behind them. People become more appreciative of qualitatively good approach, the ICT input also contributes to the
one another and one another’s working methods. In the chain units, reduction of the transaction costs in the chain. Consequently, the
different worlds get to know each other and learn to recognise chain’s efficiency will be improved as well.
that they need each other in the client’s interest. There is a shared
orientation on the problem. One major success, amongst other
32 Success and failure factors of chain units in actual practice
33. Apart from the above, it appears to be difficult to get the informa-
tion systems straight. The effectivity of information systems often
turns out to be a problem. The information doesn’t come up as it
was intended or as it was entered into the system. It happens too
often that information is still missing. The results and figures are still
often insufficiently reliable on account of entry and system errors. It
also sometimes happens that representatives of the organisations
in question have no access in the chain unit to the mother organisa-
tion’s own system.
Our practical examples show that ICT plays an important and
double role. On the one hand ICT is the ‘enabler’for new integral
approaches of multi-problem situations and a far-reaching coopera-
tion is only possible through innovative application of ICT. On the
other hand it is found to be difficult to fully utilise new possibilities
of ICT and it is an important bottleneck, certainly in situations
where the approach is of an interorganisational nature.
Success and failure factors of chain units in actual practice 33
34. “The chain unit is, in principle, a temporary
unit which is wound up when the scope of
the social issue has been limited or the client
demand has ceased to exist.”
35. Conclusion
5
It’s impossible to imagine life nowadays without cooperation in chains. More and more social issues demand a multi-disciplinary approach.
In the past we used to create a new organisation for each new problem; new institutions, with new stakes, for, at times, very specific target
groups. Chain cooperation seeks to overcome that problem by bringing the relevant parties together to solve the client’s demand or tackle a
social issue. However, the big problem of many chains is the lack of decisiveness and commitment to the cooperation, or the time-consuming
consultative structures. In this publication we have described a new organisational form that offers a solution to this: the chain unit. A solu-
tion tested in the difficult day-to-day practice of handling persistent offenders in Amsterdam, juvenile unemployment in Rotterdam and the
handling of multi-problem families in Enschede. Characteristics of this new organisational form are:
• The partners form one (temporary) shared organisational unit to which staff members of all the chain partners are seconded (interface).
• The organisational unit works on the basis of one work process.
• Demands are articulated and diagnoses are made in the organisational unit.
• The organisational unit supervises, acts as commissioning authority of the chain and monitors implementation.
• The back offices of the chain partners act as principal contractors.
• Relevant client information is transparent for all partners.
• Sometimes contains elements of controlling the demand by the purchase of necessary services.
The chain unit is, in principle, a temporary unit, which is wound up again when the scope of the social issue has been limited or client demand
35
36. has ceased to exist. The chain unit is based on solid administra- this publication at www.inaxis.nl.
tive agreements. Decisions in the chain unit are binding on the
partners involved and, if necessary, the team leader or chain unit We hope that this booklet will contribute towards a more effective
manager may make decisions if the professionals can’t solve the handling of complex social issues.
problem. This is a way of organizing influence in order to utilise the
partners’ expertise at an optimum level. You have also been able
to read in this booklet that the setting up of a chain unit starts with
administrative ambition. Begin this process only if this involves an
urgent social issue that you, as an administrator, or, if you are a civil
servant, your political bosses, are willing to personally dedicate
yourselves to. You can find information about the practical cases in
ONCE THE SCOPE OF THE ISSUE IS REDUCED, THE UNIT CAN BE WOUND UP.
36 Conclusion
37. Literature
6
[1] Aa, A. van der et al (2002) Towards a methodical framework for chain directorship in public administration. The Hague
[2] Duivenboden H.P.M. van, M.J.W. van Twist and M. Veldhuizen (2000). Chain management in the public sector: introduction. In:
Duivenboden, H.P.M. van et al Chain management in the public sector. Lemma Publishing Company B.V.: Utrecht
[3] Grijping, J.H.A.M. [1997] Chain informatization, Sdu Publishers: The Hague
[4] Aa, A. van der et al. (2002). Towards a methodical framework for chain directorship in public administration. The Hague
[5] Bekkers, V.J.J.M. et al. Adaptive ability and architectural development in chains and networks. Center for Public Innovation; Rotterdam
[6] Venrooy, A. van (2002). New styles of interorganisational public services. Eburon; Delft
[7] Chain partners Covenant on the subject of Juvenile Crime and Multiple Offenders, Amsterdam
37
38. Arjan van Venrooy is a partner at Verdonck, Klooster & Associates. He has various publications to his credit, inter alia, in the field of
public services and chain innovation. Arjan obtained his doctorate in ‘New forms of interorganisational public services’.
Léon Sonnenschein is a deputy Programme Manager at InAxis and has supervised many experiments in the field of inter-municipal
shared services and chain cooperation over the past years.
42. Chain units: Coming to grip with public chains
It’s impossible to imagine life nowadays without cooperation in chains. More
and more social issues demand a multi-disciplinary approach. In the past we
used to create a new organisation for each new problem; new institutions,
with new stakes, for, at times, very specific target groups. Chain cooperation
seeks to overcome that problem by bringing the relevant parties together
to jointly solve the client’s demand or tackle a social issue. However, the
big problem of many chains is the lack of decisiveness, and commitment
to the cooperation, or to the time-consuming consultative structures. In
this publication Arjan van Venrooy and Léon Sonnenschein describe a new
organisational form that offers a solution to this: the chain unit. This solution
has been tested in the difficult day-to-day practice of the fight against juve-
nile crime and the handling of persistent offenders in Amsterdam, tackling
juvenile unemployment in Rotterdam and handling multi-problem families in
Enschede.
Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations