4.5 Article

How an agency's responsibilities and political context shape government strategic planning: evidence from US Federal agency quadrennial reviews

Journal

PUBLIC MANAGEMENT REVIEW
Volume 20, Issue 3, Pages 377-396

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14719037.2017.1285114

Keywords

Strategic planning; strategic management; government; politics; national security

Funding

  1. IBM Center for the Business of Government
  2. American University
  3. School of International Service at American University

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This paper extends the strategic planning literature by developing four original propositions about factors that affect the conduct of strategic reviews by government agencies. The propositions highlight how a strategic review's design, analytical tools, and content are influenced by the extent of an agency's reliance on collaboration or capital investments, the strength of an agency's political support, and the existence or absence of a legislative mandate for a review. A plausibility probe involving qualitative analysis of three major quadrennial reviews by US national security agencies generates evidence that is largely consistent with the propositions.

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