Social Inclusion and Integrative Practices
Social Inclusion and Integrative Practices
Date
2014
Authors
Cappo, David
Verity, Fiona Elizabeth
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Abstract
With the passage of time valuable lessons have been learnt about both effective practices for program and system integration
and the sizable barriers, including the challenges in sustaining constructive integration. This paper is a reflection
on sustainable integrative practices and is grounded in the direct experience of one of the authors, who held the
post of the South Australian Social Inclusion Commissioner. We reflect upon the structure and mechanism of the South
Australian Social Inclusion Initiative (2002–2011) as well as using a case study of a successful integrative program of the
Social Inclusion Initiative, a program in South Australia’s School Retention Action Plan 2004 Making the Connections
(South Australian Social Inclusion Board, 2004) that was implemented to improve school retention. The case study
draws out salient factors of clear rationale, coordination, collaboration, communication, team work and trust as skills
and ingredients to bring about integration in policy and programs. While the integration literature affirms that these ingredients
are primary skills for the development of an integrative framework, we also assert that they are not enough
for successful and sustained integration. Absent from much of the literature is a discussion about the use of power and
the manner in which horizontal integrative work occurs. We take up this theme to draw out some implications for analysis
of sustainable integrative practices.
Description
© 2014 by the authors; licensee Cogitatio (Lisbon, Portugal). This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY).
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Cogitatio