What Works Scotland operated from 2014 to 2019 and is now closed.

Please direct any enquiries to Policy Scotland: admin@policyscotland.co.uk

What Works Scotland

What Works Scotland

Supporting effective public services in Scotland

Menu

  • Home
  • Key messages about PSR
  • Publications & resources
  • Case sites
    • Aberdeenshire
      • Stories from the coalface: Exploring what it means to work together in Aberdeenshire
    • Fife
    • Glasgow
      • Generating case study evidence in Glasgow’s Thriving Places
      • Evaluating the impact of participatory budgeting
      • Collaborative dissertations in Thriving Places
    • West Dunbartonshire
    • Our learning partners
  • Topics
  • Events
    • Past events
  • About us
    • Our impact
    • People
    • Our partners
    • Children’s Neighbourhoods Scotland
    • Our approach to collaborative action research
      • Conducting CAR with public services: insights from the research process
    • Our workplan
      • Evidence Bank
    • Sign up for the newsletter
    • Most recent newsletter
    • Contact us

learning

Exploring collaborative learning, research and action in public service reform: Aberdeenshire Health and Social Care Change Fund Beyond Action Learning initiative

Co-produced report that illustrates 10 key issues for the practice of collaborative and inquiring approaches to partnership working for health and social care integration. These are from the Beyond Action Learning project in Aberdeenshire which used an ‘action learning set’ approach.

Lucy Janes January 17, 2017 Read more

Collaborative Action Retreat Report – Summary of retreat held in June 2015

Report of the first collaborative action research retreat for representatives from Aberdeenshire, Fife, Glasgow and West Dunbartonshire – our case site partners – and the What Works Scotland team, held in June 2015.

Lucy Janes January 7, 2017 Read more

“Challenge current practice and assumptions! Make waves!!” What Works Scotland Collaborative Learning Event

Report from a national collaborative learning event for the practitioners from the community planning partnerships in the four What Works Scotland case sites: Aberdeenshire, Fife, Glasgow and West Dunbartonshire. It describes the purpose, the activities, and the shared learning from the event, held in February 2016.

Lucy Janes January 7, 2017 Read more

Scoping Report from the Aberdeenshire CPP and What Works Scotland’s Collaborative Learning Day 8 December 2015

This report ‘scopes’ or explores the discussions across a Collaborative Learning Day in Aberdeenshire as a group of approximately 40 people from public, third/community and research sectors in sought to think further about what it means to put ‘Christie’ into action.

Lucy Janes January 7, 2017 Read more

Partners

About us

What Works Scotland was an initiative to improve the way local areas in Scotland use evidence to make decisions about public service development and reform. It explored how public services could start to work towards the recommendations of the Christie Commission on the Future Delivery of Public Services and the Scottish Government’s priorities for reform. ...

Read more

Contact us

Got an enquiry? Please get in touch

Privacy and cookies

Please read the following page for our privacy statement and information regarding cookie consent:

Privacy and cookies

Accessibility statement

See our accessibility statement

RSS   Blog

  • What Works Scotland closed but resources still available February 18, 2020
  • Extending the community sector inquiry through a cross-sector learning community? June 5, 2019
  • Community-led activity: time to invest in expansion June 5, 2019
  • Tackling inequalities by supporting 'enterprising' communities June 5, 2019
  • Exploring community anchors, public service reform... and the wider local community sector June 5, 2019

Tags

Aberdeenshire alcohol asset-based community development CAR Christie Commission co-production collaboration Collaborative Action Research community anchors community empowerment Community Empowerment Act community planning Community Planning Partnerships community plannning community sector data democracy education evaluability assessment evaluation evidence evidence bank evidence to action Fife health inequality learning participative decision-making participatory budgeting partnership policy-making poverty prevention public service reform refugees Sarah Morton Scottish Approach Scottish Government service design third sector Thriving Places West Dunbartonshire What Works Scotland workforce young people

Social media

twitteryoutube
Logo of the University of Edinburgh Media Hopper video publishing service See our videos on Media Hopper
Copyright © 2014-2020. All rights reserved. Site published by the Interactive Content Team, Information Services, The University of Edinburgh. Sitemap.
We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience. By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent for us to set cookies. Find out more.