Apply governance theory to analyze multi-level, network, and collaborative governance arrangements beyond traditional government. Use this skill when the user needs to evaluate public-private partnerships, analyze multi-stakeholder governance structures, compare governance models across sectors, or assess institutional arrangements for collective decision-making — even if they say 'who governs this', 'public-private collaboration', or 'how are decisions made across organizations'.
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.
Trigger conditions:
When NOT to use:
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.
Identify all actors (state, private, civil society), their roles, authority relationships, and resource dependencies.
Determine the dominant governance mode (hierarchy, market, network) and assess the mix. Evaluate formal rules, informal norms, and power dynamics.
Evaluate against governance criteria: legitimacy, accountability, effectiveness, efficiency, equity, transparency. Identify trade-offs between criteria.
Identify governance failures: hierarchy failure (rigidity, bureaucratic pathology), market failure (externalities, information asymmetry), network failure (free-riding, exclusion, groupthink).
# Governance Analysis: {Context/Policy Area}
## Actors and Roles
| Actor | Sector | Role | Resources | Authority |
|-------|--------|------|-----------|-----------|
| ... | 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
| Criterion | Rating | Evidence |
|-----------|--------|----------|
| Legitimacy | ... | ... |
| Accountability | ... | ... |
| Effectiveness | ... | ... |
| Equity | ... | ... |
## Governance Failures
{Identified failures and their root causes}
## Recommendations
{Governance design improvements}
references/multi-level.mdreferences/evaluation-criteria.md