No answer

ANU Crawford School of Public Policy
Submission to Independent Review of the Australian Public Service
November 2018
For further information about this submission please contact:
Dr Robert Styles
Advisor International Development
ANU Crawford School of Public Policy
JG Crawford Building 132, Lennox Crossing
The Australian National University
Canberra ACT 2601
E: Robert.Styles@anu.edu.au
ANU Crawford School of Public Policy 2
Submission to Independent Review of the Australian Public Service
ANU Crawford School of Public Policy
Crawford School of Public Policy is housed within the College of Asia and the Pacific (CAP),
Australian National University (ANU). CAP leads intellectual engagement with the Asia-
Pacific region through research, teaching and contributions to public debate, and seeks to
set the international standard for scholarship concerning the region.
The Crawford School’s approach to public policy draws upon disciplinary excellence in the
core areas of economics, government, environment and development, and also deep
geographical knowledge of Asia and the Pacific, including Australia. Some of the region’s
most important researchers and many staff within the School are active on government
committees and in key advisory roles across government, business and civil society.
Students at the School are valued members of the region’s leading public policy community
and contribute actively to the impact being made on the world’s challenges surrounding
such issues as water, food, energy, economic development, the environment, and
governance.
Executive Summary
The ongoing work of being future ready is adaptive by nature and requires real-time,
flexible, collaborative and deliberative responses to prevailing situations in relation to likely
future scenarios. Governments, higher education institutions, business and civil society
across Australia, Asia and the Pacific will need to work together in response to local and
regional security issues, particularly water, food, energy, health, economic, environmental,
indigenous and bilateral. Effective responses, we expect, will be taken by groups of
stakeholders sharing a common purpose who have the necessary legitimacy and support to
prototype and strategically implement innovations. For this to occur the APS will have to
reinforce the practice or strategic public sector leadership and cultivate a broader
organisational climate that embodies an appetite for risk and learning. Processes such as
Strategic Roadmapping; instituting particularised forms of Polycentric Governance; and,
cultivating Moral Self-Determination will need to be implemented to reinforce the transfer
and evolution of successful learning and practice into the system. In this context higher
education will best serve by providing world class advice too and partnering with key people
to help them strategically implement good governance, regulatory frameworks, policy
evaluation, public policy, applied economics, public administration, environmental
management and technical solutions with measured impact. Learning and development will
need to be directed toward the real time capacity building requirements integral to the
adaptive responses being taken. Multi-disciplinary, multi-player, strategically driven action
research and innovation will need to become business-as-usual within ‘One future ready
APS’.
ANU Crawford School of Public Policy 3
Submission to Independent Review of the Australian Public Service
Detailed Response
As the review has already identified, the capability and strength of today’s APS rests on a
suite of characteristics that should be preserved and conserved as the institution orients
toward becoming ‘One future ready APS’. Underpinned by its values, the APS culture,
qualities of its workforce, skills and knowledge of the public servants and reputation of the
Service form the platform for future development. The approach we recommend builds on
this platform with a focus on motivating and purposing this intrinsic good through enabling
environments where it is safe to experiment, try new things and strategically innovate.
While strategic leadership, collaboration and innovation have been key recommendations to
governments in Australia and overseas over recent years1 we suggest a more pragmatic
approach is required.
Depending on the issue being addressed, a pragmatic response would require
representatives from government, higher education, business and civil society to proactively
redesign their interactions and engineer their pursuits in line with a shared sense of higher-
order purpose. Building the capacity of the system to do this with greater effect would,
amongst other things, encompass three broad processes that in our experience are ideally
facilitated through the workplace: taking perspective on a preferred and probable future
and rendering long-term Strategic Roadmaps; aligning the many centres of decision making
by instituting particularised forms of Polycentric Governance; and, cultivating a High
Performing Mind and the capacity for Moral Self-Determination of those involved.
Over the last six years the ANU Crawford School of Public Policy has been refining this multi-
disciplinary approach with good effect. Australian Public Service Employee Census data
(Commission 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018) captured pre and post several interventions within
the Australian Public Sector showed a significant, positive and sustained improvement along
several dimensions, including: Employee Engagement; Inclusion & Diversity; Wellbeing;
Leadership; Workplace Culture; Workplace Conditions; Performance Management;
Organisational Change; Innovation; Risk Management; APS Values & Code of Conduct; and,
Agency Specific Performance. These measures showed significant improvements when
compared with those baseline measures taken over previous years, with some measures
improving favourably by up to 25% and 28% (see Appendix). Learning in these contexts has
been by design. These three processes are inseparable and highly interdependent. We
suggest they are necessary capabilities for ‘One future ready APS’. Each is outlined below.
1
Cabinet Office, 2012. The Civil Service Reform Plan, London: HM Government.
Innovation and Science Australia, 2017. Australia 2030: prosperity through innovation, Canberra: Australian
Government.
Institute of Public Affairs, 2017. Executive Master of Public Policy, London: Civil Service Learning.
Prime Minister and Cabinet, 2010. Ahead of the Game: Blueprint for the Reform of Australian Government
Administration, Canberra: Government of Australia.
Prime Minister and Cabinet, 2012. Australia in the Asia Century, Canberra: Australian Government.
Sunningdale Institute, 2010. Beyond Light Bulbs and Pipelines: Leading and Nurturing Innovation in the public
Sector, UK: National School of Government.
ANU Crawford School of Public Policy 4
Submission to Independent Review of the Australian Public Service
Necessary capabilities for ‘One future ready APS’
- Taking perspective on a preferred and probable future - Strategic Roadmapping
Taking perspective on a preferred and probable future and rendering a Strategic Roadmap
focuses on mapping desired futures and strategically implementing a shared, consensual
vision for delivering on high impact opportunities and innovation, especially when facing
uncertainties or challenges in outlook. Developed by Cambridge University with the
Australian National University, it extends the practices of foresighting and scenario planning
to support strategic alignment and dialogue between the various sub-divisions within an
organisation and also between other organisations or key external stakeholders. Academic
involvement brings to these efforts the multi-disciplinary rigor and diversity required to
undertake an active inquiry into, and consideration of, what a preferred and probable future
could actually look like within the organisation and society in relation to the endeavours
being undertaken. The output is a much clearer understanding of the prevailing trends and
drivers in the system that will likely shape behaviour and organised effort and the mapping
of a consensual pathway or roadmap for the implementation of an agreed set of
strategically qualified opportunities. We believe for ‘One future ready APS’ to emerge a
Roadmapping Culture has to be cultivated.
- Aligning the many centres of decision making – Polycentric Governance
Instituting forms of Polycentric Governance focuses on aligning the many centres of decision
making under an overarching set of functional norms, policies and procedures. Such formal
and informal regulatory environments tend to emerge as an evolutionary response to the
ordering of interactions defined by the Strategic Roadmap. Facilitating this, in our
experience, involves extending a framework borne out of the anthropological studies of
cooperative group behaviour for which Ruth Elinor-Ostrom was awarded a Nobel Prize in
Economics in 2009. This polycentric vision places at centre stage the individuals and forms
of self-governance and organisation that naturally result from their interactions as they
constitute themselves into mutually respectful and working relationships. Dialogue centres
on the application of eight principles for building and leading sustainable and equitable
organisations, groups and teams which are particularised and adapted into the public-sector
arena. Such normative contexts tend to be morally and ethically sound and typically persist
through time and prevail, even under conditions of seeming chaos. For ‘One future ready
APS’ to emerge, being able to cultivate such healthy normative and regulatory environments
that build and maintain trust and reciprocity will be a necessary prerequisite. Reinforcing
the suite of APS values and code of conduct would be integral to this work2.
- Cultivating a High Performing Mind – Moral Self-Determination
Cultivating a High Performing Mind and the capacity for Moral Self-Determination involves
enhancing the ability of the leaders, managers and workers involved in civic endeavours to
discern what is important – a values proposition – and to persistently allocate attention to
that, which is essentially a real time here and now practice. The approach we recommend
harnesses the latest research advances from Contextual Behavioural Science taken at ANU
that provide an understanding of how language and cognition functions to direct covert and
overt behaviour. Individuals coached in this regard become increasingly aware of their inner
2
https://www.apsc.gov.au/aps-values-1; https://www.apsc.gov.au/code-conduct
ANU Crawford School of Public Policy 5
Submission to Independent Review of the Australian Public Service experience, particularly in challenging situations, and depending on what the situation
affords, persist with or change behaviour in line with chosen values. They are more able to
discern situations or choice points where they tend to adopt habitual and often defensive
responses to unpleasant experience and exercise moral self-determination in pursuit of
valued living. Cultivating such a high performing mind, we have observed, has a range of
important applications relevant to professional practice within the APS, including the
development of leadership attributes, enhancing performance, increasing mental flexibility
and improving physical and mental wellbeing. We see this as an essential aspect of building
‘One future ready APS’ that goes to the heart of the human dimension. To be successful
Public Servants at every level, particularly those in leadership, will be required to exercise
such psychological flexibility.
Learning by design to close the capability gaps
Looking forward we suggest the nature of learning at work across ‘One future ready APS’
will have to become bespoke by design and integrated with the responses being taken to
prevailing situations. Higher education institutions such as the ANU Crawford School of
Public Policy, the Melbourne School of Government, and the Institute of Governance and
Policy Analysis can partner with the APS and related stakeholders based on agreed system
wide priorities and participant developmental needs. Programs can be custom designed as
an integral part of the overall strategy specifically to close the capability gaps across the
system, be they hard or soft. Such adaptable learning models could be a blend of current
best practice such as the those flowing from the UK Civil Service Reform Plan 2012 or
conceived fresh as a suite of action learning phases that flexibly integrate into life-at-work.
Innovation will be required on behalf of the education sector on this front.
What the Crawford School can do…
As mentioned, the ANU Crawford School of Public Policy works with government, business
and civil society across Australia, Asia and the Pacific to address local and regional security
issues. We do this by providing world class advise and strategically partnering with key
people to design and implement solutions with long-term impact. In each instance,
depending on stated objectives the faculty involved has engaged subject matter expertise to
enhance the realisation of desired impact. From alumni and professional networks, we
deploy leading academics and professionals from fields ranging from, for example, public
policy, economics, government, law, business planning, organisational performance,
engineering, psychology, gender equity and health to support the leaning objectives of any
particular endeavour. We suggest that such multi-disciplinary approaches will have to
become the norm in ‘One future ready APS’. It is going to become increasing important that
all players across the sector with a stake in the future cultivate the ability to think
strategically about future changing contexts and contribute academically and professionally
to establishing the necessary ongoing cooperative and productive cultures capable of
bringing about desired change. This, we suggest, has to be learned.
Accessing professional learning from within the APS
In addition to integrated professional development designed to strategically close APS
capability gaps, individual learning opportunities and credentialing are important. To this
end, the work of the APS Review should consider and recognise the existing best-practice
ANU Crawford School of Public Policy 6
Submission to Independent Review of the Australian Public Service capability enhancement models throughout the Australian Government. These provide the
essential ‘macro’ structure that sets out the organisational ways in which particular
departments and agencies aim to grow and enhance their intellectual capital. Equally
essential – and often overlooked in current arrangements – is a ‘micro’ structure aimed at
the individual to ensure s/he accesses and engages the broader macro professional learning
structure. Evidence suggests there are 3 key elements that should feature in the micro
structures to support increase of intellectual capital for the APS:
1) Incentives: opportunities for professional learning must have incentives for
individual staff to access these and should align with the broader macro learning
structure. Incentives could take the form of funding for professional learning. The
StudyBank annual amounts of up to $2,000 across most of the APS are now well out
of step with reality in which 1 course at a respective tertiary institution is at least
$2,500 and ideally APS employees would be studying more than 1 course as part of a
degree program pa. Incentives to pursue professional learning should also include
realistic study leave arrangements to support face to face and online professional
learning at recognised educational institutions.
2) Microcredentials: by 2030, ever-increasing demands brought by portfolio careers,
increased changes to jobs and the usual family/work pressures will mean that the
appetite for learning modules that can be parked and used at a later date towards
further learning programs will be critical. Microcredentials provide exciting
opportunities for the APS to upskill and incentivise professional learning.
Microcredentials can provide learners with access to shorter learning experiences
such as executive education and could then potentially be recognised towards higher
degree programs. Crawford School would be willing to develop and offer pilot
programs in microcredentials working in partnership with other recognised
Australian universities.
3) Microlearning: opportunities for APS employees to engage in micro-learning will be
important in the micro-structure to breathe life into the broader macro capability
structure. Microlearning is cost effective and an efficient path to learning on the job:
these are chunks of learning time that effectively bring together those with the skills
and those who seek the skills: in online and face to face arrangements.
A combination of these 3 elements will see the APS strengthen and increase its intellectual
capital in the coming decade.
Appendix
Results showing significant and sustained change in workplace culture and performance
within two Australian government organisations
Below are graphical representations of the measured long-term impact of two Strategic
Public Sector Leadership interventions led by Ms Daryl Karp, CEO, Museum of Australian
Democracy (MoAD) and Ms Stacie Hall, First Assistant Secretary, Property & Construction
Division (PCD), Department of Finance. These initiatives were facilitated in partnership with
Dr Robert Styles, Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University. The MoAD
intervention took place in 2014-15 and the PCD intervention took place in 2016-17. Both
involved developing a long-term strategy and instituting particularised forms of polycentric
governance and prosocial approaches in achieving a range of defined opportunities.
In both cases, Australian Public Service Employee Census data (Commission 2014, 2015,
2017, 2018) captured pre and post each intervention showed a significant, positive and
sustained improvement along several dimensions, including: Employee Engagement;
Inclusion & Diversity; Wellbeing; Leadership; Workplace Culture; Workplace Conditions;
Performance Management; Organisational Change; Innovation; Risk Management; APS
Values & Code of Conduct; and, Agency Specific Performance. In both instances, these
measures showed significant improvements when compared with those baseline measures
taken over previous years, with some measures improving favourably by up to 25% and
28%. See Figures 1 to 6 below.
Appendix: Results showing significant sustained change in workplace culture & performance 8
Figure 1. Measures identified in MoAD’s APSC 2014-15 Employee Census Report (Commission 2014, 2015) as having significantly improved
compared to the Agency’s measures from the previous year.
Appendix: Results showing significant sustained change in workplace culture & 9
performance
Figure 2. Reported percentage improvements (Commission 2014, 2015) in MoAD’s 2014
performance measures (red bars) compared with 2015 performance measures (blue bars).
Appendix: Results showing significant sustained change in workplace culture & 10
performance
Figure 3. Reported percentage improvements (Commission 2014, 2015, 2017) in MoAD’s
2014 performance measures (red bars) compared with 2015 performance measures (blue
bars) and 2017 performance measures (green bars) showing sustained change.
Appendix: Results showing significant sustained change in workplace culture & performance 11
Figure 4. Measures identified in the PCD’s 2017 Employee Census Report (Commission 2017) as having significantly improved compared to the
Division’s measures from the previous year.
Appendix: Results showing significant sustained change in workplace culture & 12
performance
Figure 5. Reported percentage improvements (Commission 2017) in PCD’s 2016
performance measures (red bars) compared with 2017 performance measures (blue bars).
ANU Crawford School of Public Policy 13
Submission to Independent Review of the Australian Public Service
Figure 6. Reported percentage improvements (Commission 2017, 2018) in PCD’s 2016
performance measures (red bars) compared with 2017 performance measures (blue bars)
and 2018 performance measures (green bars) showing sustained change.