Municipal Health Boards
The Municipal Health Boards are spaces for intersectoral deliberation. Participants include members of the Local Health Boards, the Municipal Health Council, health service staff, social health organizations, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and other social and institutional sectors. These participatory spaces were created with the aim of drafting local health strategies and the Annual Operational Plan. Furthermore, their responsibilities include monitoring and evaluating these programs. The Health Boards meet three times a year.
Institutional design
Formalization: is the innovation embedded in the constitution or legislation, in an administrative act, or not formalized at all?
Frequency: how often does the innovation take place: only once, sporadically, or is it permanent or regular?
Mode of Selection of Participants: is the innovation open to all participants, access is restricted to some kind of condition, or both methods apply?
Type of participants: those who participate are individual citizens, civil society organizations, private stakeholders or a combination of those?
Decisiveness: does the innovation takes binding, non-binding or no decision at all?
Co-governance: is there involvement of the government in the process or not?
- Formalization
- embedded in the constitution/legislation
- Frequency
- regular
- Mode of selection of participants
- restricted
- Type of participants
- civil society
- Decisiveness
- democratic innovation yields a binding decision
- Co-Governance
- yes
Means
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Ends
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