Governance Theory
Overview
Governance theory examines how collective decisions are made and implemented through arrangements that extend beyond traditional government. It encompasses multi-level governance, network governance, public-private partnerships, and corporate governance, recognizing that governing increasingly involves non-state actors, markets, and networks.
When to Use
Trigger conditions:
- Analyzing decision-making structures involving multiple stakeholders across sectors
- Evaluating public-private partnerships or collaborative governance arrangements
- Comparing governance models (hierarchical, market, network)
When NOT to use:
- When analyzing individual policy decisions (use policy streams model)
- When studying stakeholder prioritization within a single organization (use stakeholder theory)
- When analyzing public official behavior as self-interested agents (use public choice theory)
Assumptions
IRON LAW: Governance Is NOT Government
Governance includes non-state actors, networks, and market mechanisms
in collective decision-making. Three ideal types:
1. HIERARCHY: authority-based, top-down, bureaucratic rules
2. MARKET: competition-based, price signals, contracts
3. NETWORK: trust-based, reciprocity, negotiation
No real-world arrangement is purely one type — governance analysis
identifies the MIX and evaluates its appropriateness for the context.
Methodology
Step 1: Map the Governance Arrangement
Identify all actors (state, private, civil society), their roles, authority relationships, and resource dependencies.
Step 2: Classify the Governance Mode
Determine the dominant governance mode (hierarchy, market, network) and assess the mix. Evaluate formal rules, informal norms, and power dynamics.
Step 3: Assess Performance
Evaluate against governance criteria: legitimacy, accountability, effectiveness, efficiency, equity, transparency. Identify trade-offs between criteria.
Step 4: Diagnose Failures
Identify governance failures: hierarchy failure (rigidity, bureaucratic pathology), market failure (externalities, information asymmetry), network failure (free-riding, exclusion, groupthink).
Output Format
markdown
# Governance Analysis: {Context/Policy Area}
## Actors and Roles
|-------|--------|------|-----------|-----------|
| ... | State/Private/Civil Society | ... | ... | ... |
## Governance Mode
- Dominant mode: {hierarchy/market/network}
- Mix: {how modes combine}
- Formal rules: {legal/regulatory framework}
- Informal norms: {trust, reciprocity, power dynamics}
## Performance Assessment
|-----------|--------|----------|
| Legitimacy | ... | ... |
| Accountability | ... | ... |
| Effectiveness | ... | ... |
| Equity | ... | ... |
## Governance Failures
{Identified failures and their root causes}
## Recommendations
{Governance design improvements}
Gotchas
- Governance ≠ good governance: Governance is descriptive (how decisions ARE made). Good governance is normative (how decisions SHOULD be made). Don't conflate analysis with prescription.
- Network romanticism: Network governance is not inherently superior to hierarchy. Networks can exclude, reproduce inequality, and lack democratic accountability.
- Accountability gaps: Multi-level and network governance creates accountability challenges. When "everyone governs," no one may be accountable for outcomes.
- Context dependency: Governance arrangements that work in one institutional context may fail in another. Culture, legal tradition, and capacity affect governance effectiveness.
- Shadow of hierarchy: Even in network governance, government often retains ultimate authority. The "shadow of hierarchy" shapes network behavior even when not directly exercised.
References
- For multi-level governance frameworks, see
references/multi-level.md
- For governance evaluation criteria and indicators, see
references/evaluation-criteria.md