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Interagency Collaboration

Bruner* states that research about interagency collaboration is important because of the following factors:
  • No one can do it alone.
  • Improving the quality of life and the education of children with disabilities and their families requires the collective knowledge, skills, experience and expertise of all family members and professionals.
  • It requires that the community and all service systems work together to achieve the goals of the child and family.

Most human services are crisis-oriented.
  • Services are generally administered by dozens of rigid and distinct separate agencies and programs and each have their own:
    • Categories that reflect a particular focus
    • Sources of funding
    • Guidelines
    • Accountability requirements
    • Rules governing expenditure of funds

  • Agencies with pronounced dissimilarities in professional orientation and institutional mandates seldom see each other as allies.
  • Sufficient funds not available to provide necessary prevention, support, & treatment services to make lasting difference for young people who must overcome multiple problems, years of neglect.

*Bruner, C.; Kunesh, L.G.; Knuth, R.A. “What Does Research Say About Interagency Collaboration?” http://www.ncrel.org/sdrs/areas/stw_esys/8agcycol.htm


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