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Coalition Building in Surf Therapy: A Case Study on Collective Impact

Coalition Building in Surf Therapy: A Case Study on Collective Impact by  Matthew Mattila

Author(s): Matthew Mattila

Abstract:

This article explores the experience of the surf therapy sector developing a coalition using the collective impact framework. Several dozen surf therapy programs and sector supporters now meet annually to discuss progress and collaborate on shared sector goals after years of programs working independently and even viewing one another as competitors. Key participants found collective impact worked in encouraging shared leadership, common agenda, reinforcing activities, and continuous communication. However, participants found challenges with collective impact in the approach feeling top-down, difficultly agreeing on a common agenda and shared measures, and uneven contribution and follow-through from programs. Additional challenges included limited opportunities for program participants to contribute to the coalition building, lack of a social justice orientation, and lack of backbone organization funding. Recommendations for sectors using coalition building include considering funding and previous experience building coalitions, finding humble and bold leaders, getting the timing right, being focused and realistic with targets, and streamlining decision making.


Article:

Download the PDF version to access complete article, including Tables and Figures. 

 

The rapid rise of the International Surf Therapy Organization (ISTO) suggests a sector with a rich history of collaboration, data collection, and shared goals. However, as recent as a year prior to the organization’s founding, few organizations spoke regularly and many viewed one another as competitors for funding and media. In this article, we’ll explore how the sector came together using the collective impact framework. Collective impact was first described by Kania and Kramer (2011) as commitment of a diverse group to a common agenda for solving a specific challenge.

 

ISTO is a collective of the world’s leading surf therapy proponents, researchers and influencers working together to share best practice, collaborate on research, and advocate about the benefits of surf therapy. Established in October 2017, ISTO seeks to enable more people in need access to safe surf therapy programs globally, and for surf therapy to become a widely accepted evidence-based form of care. We collaborate to help change the lives of individuals using surf therapy to positively impact physical and mental wellbeing.  ISTO has three working groups, an independent board, CEO, data collection tools, a shared research bibliography, organizes regular conferences, and provides access and organizational support to a Ph.D. candidate specializing in surf therapy. Over a period of nine months with the input from the broad coalition, organizing and editing by the research working group, and guidance of professors with experience creating similar documents, ISTO created a guiding document, our declaration, to help coordinate efforts and to communicate our role for an external audience.  The Surf Therapy Declaration (See Appendix; to see Appendix, download the PDF version to access the complete article, including Tables and Figures) guides targets for the organization and the sector. An internal ISTO research group led the creation of the document based on similar templates used in academic circles. The draft declaration was then shared with the group and further developed. This declaration provides a concise summary of the benefits, targets, and assets of the organization. This helps establish the credibility and rigor of surf therapy as surfing moves into the Olympics and grows as a professional sport. Since its development, the Surf Therapy Declaration was endorsed by surf professionals and surf therapy practitioners at contests, conferences, and workshops.

Prior to the founding of ISTO, surf therapy was viewed as disorganized and often not taken seriously. With little evidence to point to, the view was hard to dispute. Few researchers were able to reference existing work and programs did not share or often even collect data. However, programs, like Waves for Change, continued to grow and develop in isolation as new programs launched regularly. Waves for Change, a non-profit based in South Africa, works in communities affected by violence, poverty and conflict, where mental health services are often stigmatized and under-resourced. Working in partnership with local community members, they identify, train and resource local surf coach mentors, who we work with to open programs that service the youth of their own home communities.

 

They provide child-friendly mental health services through access to safe spaces, caring mentors, and a curriculum based on surfing focusing on teaching skills to cope with stress, regulate behavior, build positive relationships, and make positive life choices. In 2017 Waves for Change served one thousand participants across six sites and employed thirty coaches. They conducted internal evaluations and began to work with researchers on external evaluations and reviewing existing evidence.

 

Waves for Change developed the idea for a sector collaboration as an Ashoka Globalizer program. The Ashoka Globalizer helps social innovation programs prepare for global growth. They connect programs like Waves for Change with a team of global advisors to prepare impact and implementation strategies. As part of the program, they were challenged to develop the sector rather than their program. They recognized the factors slowing the expansion of surf therapy were the limited evidence base, lack of communication, and uncoordinated approach to sector development. As Waves for Change struggled to identify a clear leader in the sector, they explored alternative methods for coordinating action and decided to move ahead with collective impact.

 

Kania and Kramer (2011) establish the main criteria as different from most collaborations as they involve a centralized infrastructure, dedicated staff, and structured process leading to a common agenda, shared measurement, continuous communication, and mutually reinforcing activities for participants. Kania and Kramer (2011) explain that five key elements are critical in achieving collaboration and impact include common agenda, shared measurements, reinforcing activities, continuous communication, and backbone support. Using collective impact, Waves for Change was able to serve as backbone support without needing to be viewed as the best, oldest, or most qualified participant, although at times other programs perceived Waves for Change as acting in unilateral ways.

 

This paper explores the ISTO experience using the collective impact framework. From using a logic model to agree on a shared agenda, to how Waves for Change provided backbone support until the organization was able to establish an independent board and staff; this paper will outline the challenges including those proposed by Wolff in “10 Places Where Collective Impact Gets It Wrong” (Wolff, 2016),  and successes ISTO experienced while following the framework. We explore the challenges of maintaining momentum in a collaborative consortium like ISTO. This paper will explore the pathway to collective impact, benefits, challenges, and the backbone organization’s guidance for the future.

 

The Lead-up to ISTO

 

In 2016, a small South African surf therapy program sought to benchmark their success against peer programs. Following recommended best practices, they captured data from participants using validated psychological scales at baseline and following the program intervention. However, when they looked for data to compare against, they could not find any relevant findings published. Across the few surf therapy programs, they found even fewer published regular findings. Those who did tended to only publish annual reports. Like Waves for Change, annual reports tended to read more like advertisements for programs as they are intended to encourage donors, rather provide robust and replicable data that capture program impact. After expanding their search to evidence-based sport for development programs beyond surfing, they still struggled to find comparable data. Many peer programs have similar aims, but they capture slightly different measures or using alternative methodologies that make comparison and benchmarking of programs challenging.

 

Waves for Change explored the challenge further and learned other programs faced similar issues. In the Sport for Development sector, commonly described as the use of sport as a tool to bring about positive change in the lives of people, standardized data collection tools were uncommon leading to a lack of evidence and slower evolution of the sector. Despite having common goals and similar approaches, programs rarely collaborated on building the evidence for their programs or the sector. Lack of consistent evidence spiraled back into difficulties for researchers and academics to build studies preventing more evidence from being collected and analyzed. Having identified lack of collaboration as a potential driver of the issue, Waves for Change focused on bringing programs, researchers, and influencers together to forge a path forward.

Being a small organization based at the far edge of Africa did not position Waves for Change as a leader. In order to attract relevant experts, they had to find a structure to organize people without having a clear leader or any authority. Collective impact provided a framework to bring programs together without needing to have authority or expertise over partners. The first attempt at bringing surf therapy programs together failed as Waves for Change could not achieve critical mass of willing programs to warrant a conference. The timing was too early for the surf therapy sector. Wolff (2001a) emphasizes the importance of timing in terms of programs being ready to commit to unified efforts before the coalition is formed.

 

In an effort to establish a common set of tools for tracking the impact of Sport for Development and driving sector progress, the first international surf therapy conference brought together action sports programs. Beginning at the first conference and continuing over the following year through working groups, these programs, sector experts, and researchers came together under the collective impact framework and developed a common logic model, identified gaps in the sector, and built a series of tools to address these gaps. In this first iteration of Waves for Change leading a surf therapy conference, the group achieved their goals through a collaborative approach to completing a clear scope of work. The group continued to collaborate following the conference to test, validate, and then share what they called the Action Impact Toolkit. The toolkit is freely available for programs and used worldwide. The collaborating partners still regularly work together in the sector.

 

Using what they learned from the first international surf therapy conference, Waves for Change again reached out to numerous surf therapy programs and spread the word about their plan to bring together programs to build the evidence base for the sector and improve programs through learning from one another. Several factors may have enabled the surf therapy sector to come together for this conference include the additional time programs had to mature, interest programs developed in collaborating and growing, and the experience and tools the backbone organization gained in hosting an additional conference.

 

Benefits of Collective Impact as a Coalition Building Framework

 

The collective impact framework brings several strengths to coalition building. We focus on the benefits experienced through the ISTO development. These benefits include shared leadership, common agenda, reinforcing activities, and continuous communication. These components were noted as especially valuable by ISTO participants and the backbone organization.

 

No Established Leader Reduced Early Conflict

 

From the onset, framing the approach as one of collective impact helped encourage programs to participate. While Waves for Change was not viewed as direct competition for programs outside of Africa, other programs were reluctant to bestow sector leadership status on them. Being able to position Waves for Change as only providing backbone support, but otherwise having the same status as other programs, helped convince programs to join. Although Waves for Change organized and facilitated the conferences, they made it clear that ISTO was a collective of programs. Whenever decision-making was questioned by other programs, they took the time to hear alternatives and change course on decisions. For a sector with many programs positioning for a leadership role, being able to work together without having to declare a leader saved much time and discussion. Being part of the community seeking to improve its own program and the sector contributed to Waves for Change’s success as a backbone organization and the formation of ISTO. They understood their own struggles and priorities were common to other members of the group. The power of aligned motivation was previously explored as Wolff (2001a) explains that coalitions are more likely to succeed when motivation comes from within the community.

 

Setting A Common Agenda Provided A Shared Foundation

 

In a post conference survey, 100% of participants reported that the common agenda was the most important condition of ISTO’s success followed by mutually reinforcing activities and continuous communication at 67% each. The group established several mantras to center themselves around a common agenda and goal. These included “share wildly” and “to go fast, go alone, to go far, go together.” By encouraging all programs to show and share at least some data collection, programs felt protected from others stealing data and ideas as well as united programs in building the evidence base. In post conference surveys (International Surf Therapy Organization, 2019), participants claimed:

 

"The willingness of organizations to come together and share their experiences, both positive and negative, and even the IP (intellectual property) and processes integral to their success is something I have not experienced in any other setting as either a practitioner or researcher."

 

Mutually Reinforcing Activities Enabled Synergy

 

Two thirds of respondents felt that working on reinforcing activities was one of the most important conditions of success. These activities included things like advocating for surf therapy using program highlights and evidence from individual programs. The development and sharing of this research promoted the individual programs and provided real evidence for surf therapy as a sector. One of the key outcomes of the second ISTO conference was the Surf Therapy Declaration. The declaration publicly stated where ISTO would focus and which outcomes were prioritized. When pro surfers, researchers, or new programs wanted to know the goals of ISTO, we could simply point them to the shared declaration.

 

Using a common tracking tool, ISTO helped programs collect data. This activity reinforced the goal of building an evidence base and helped programs understand their strengths and opportunities for improvement. Several research participants were able to leverage data from the shared tools to publish reports, complete graduate research, and construct a doctoral program of study in surf therapy. Although the tracking tool was not a validated measure, it instilled the value of collecting data and showed the value collective data could bring. Programs also worked together as part of several working groups based on their interest and capacity. As part of their outreach strategy, the organization presented at multiple international conferences, often cited by participants as a key success.

 

Continuous Communication Built Cohesion

 

The backbone organization provided escalating levels of communication as programs became more involved. The progression was:

 

  1. Public invitation
  2. Follow-up emails
  3. Online survey
  4. Phone calls
  5. Video Conference
  6. Whatsapp text message group
  7. Email groups per working group

 

This progression prevented the backbone organization from communication overload from programs that were not yet fully committed to joining the organization. As they provided more information and moved closer to joining, the programs received more personal and frequent communication. Leading up to and following the annual conferences, programs were invited to a Whatsapp group for frequent, informal communication that encouraged sharing and collaboration. For more formal discussions, regular email groups and video conferences were utilized. Participants offered that they found benefits in working with others in the sector:

 

"Surfing and Surf Therapy can sometimes feel like a solo venture, and ISTO provided a place for all of us to come together as one."

 

Challenges of the Collective Impact Framework

 

To assess where participants found difficulties with the collective impact framework, we surveyed the group following the first two annual conferences. The key challenges in the first three years of coalition building in ISTO have included the approach feeling top-down, difficultly agreeing on a common agenda and shared measures, and uneven contribution and follow-through from programs (International Surf Therapy Organization, 2019). Challenges identified by Wolff (2016) and that currently face ISTO’s coalition building efforts include limited opportunities for program participants to contribute to the coalition building, lack of a social justice orientation, and lack of backbone organization funding.

 

Top-Down Approach Did Not Feel Collaborative

 

Participants felt too much of the decision making happened through leaders of the coalition, the backbone organization and Board, rather than organically coming from the group as a whole. Among the critiques, the top ranked was the top down approach. As Wolff (2016) explains, collective impact emerges from top-down business-consulting experience and is thus not a true community-development model. The framework was established from a select group. ISTO also established an Advisory Board and a CEO as the time commitment exceeded the capacity of the backbone organization. Several participants preferred a more bottom-up approach.

 

Disagreement on the Common Agenda and Shared Measures

 

Several programs struggled with the common agenda. One challenge with a common agenda across a large group is that a common goal is seldom unanimous. We encouraged disagreement, but disagreeing about the overall goal of ISTO caused challenges. Several programs felt ISTO should be used as a gatekeeper to police the sector and ensure bad actors were prevented from developing. While many programs felt enthusiastic around generous sharing, one survey respondent felt over sharing was the wrong approach, and that sharing should be done selectively rather than widely.

 

Part of the challenge the backbone organization may have overlooked was the close geographic and offering proximity of programs in surf therapy heavy regions. Wolff (2001a) has described this as the intensity of turf wars to demonstrate how competition within sectors can affect readiness for coalition engagement. ISTO worked to be more culturally and geographically representative on the Board by adding advisors from regions including Latin America.

 

Uneven Contributions and Follow Through were Difficult for Organizations of Varying Sizes and Capacity

 

While nearly all Surf Therapy programs are relatively small compared to similar sectors, there is significant variance in individual program’s budget and capacity. The larger, better resourced programs provided significant support in terms of man hours contributed to ISTO. Their contributions supported a number of successes raising the profile of the surf therapy sector and potentially the legitimacy of their own programs. The number of programs participating in ISTO went from six to nearly sixty across the three annual conferences. Many of these programs were launched and accelerated using ISTO’s resources and shared best practices. Newly launched programs used the data collection tools, volunteer and indemnity templates, safety plans, and the research bibliography to support their growing programs. Some of the more active and larger programs felt they were contributing more than others and potentially creating competitors in the space. Organizations with less experience often overcommitted to tasks and were unable to follow-through while still starting up their own program. Across the working groups, many tasks committed to at the conference were not completed by their deadlines.

 

Challenges of the Collective Impact Framework that ISTO Coalition Building Efforts Now Face

 

Wolff (2016) identified several additional challenges found relevant to the ISTO coalition building process including limited opportunities for program participants to contribute to the coalition building, lack of a social justice orientation, and lack of backbone organization funding. By working with organization founder and mangers, the coalition neglected to bring the voices of those most directly affected by the programs and issues they are trying to address. Wolff (2016) establishes this omission leads to missing a critical voice and potential solutions. In addition to limited inclusion of the participant voices, collective impact also lacks a social justice orientation. Many of the ISTO programs address issues that may have similar root causes. However, as explored by Wolff (2016), using a top-down method like collective impact often limits the ability for those with little power to establish the urgency of root causes including inequality or systemic racism and sexism. Finally, on the operational side, collective impact requests significant contribution from a backbone organization and assumes they are capable and well-funded. As established by Wolff (2016) very few coalitions can find or afford such capable and funded backbone organizations. When they do, coalitions run the risk of being more top-down rather than truly collaborative.

 

Looking forward, ISTO plans to address these challenges. At the most recent ISTO conference, the focus shifted from internal to external audiences with two full days open to public participation. An additional day encouraged everyone to join several organizations in running surf therapy at a local beach. While the participants were able to share their experiences, next year we propose a more explicit role for participants on panels and groups at the conference. ISTO will encourage individual programs to include participants’ voices in the development and strategy of their programs. Waves for Change shared several examples including a foundational study on the voices and images captured by participants used to develop the program.

 

In addition, ISTO as an organization, will review the working groups annually and explore adding a social justice group. Wolff (2001b) explains that a social justice component is a unique characteristic of the most effective community coalitions. This group could encourage programs to address local community social justice topics relevant to surf therapy programs. For example, in addition to providing psychoeducation to youth participants on coping techniques to manage stress associated with living in a violent community, Waves for Change collaborates with local community groups combatting violence and gang participation to improve community conditions.  ISTO could support initiatives that develop partnerships and share resources to address issues such as racism or sexism across regions. If successful, ISTO could serve in promoting a broader role of surf therapy programs in giving participants greater voice and access to resources that address root causes of marginalization. This working group could also develop a social justice section of the conference and host participant led discussions focused on social justice issues. ISTO collaborated on a sector theory of change and should continue to update the inputs and potential interventions focused on social justice.

 

One of the most difficult and time-consuming challenges has been developing sustainability in funding. As ISTO grew from a small data exchanging workshop to an international coalition with annual conferences, the funding requirements have also grown. The number of programs, media inquiries, website, and resource requirements demanded more than part-time volunteers. As part of her role, the CEO leads the fund raising. The CEO sets the budget with approval from the board and strives to meet fundraising targets. ISTO should also continue to encourage a fundraising working group and a panel at the conferences. Past suggestions include ways for programs to participate in larger grants as part of ISTO to access funds they would otherwise not qualify for.

 

Suggestions from the Backbone Organization

 

For sectors considering coalition building, ISTO found additional guidance would be helpful. The suggestions include considering funding and previous experience building coalitions, finding humble and bold leaders, getting the timing right, being focused and realistic with targets, and being quicker with decisions. These suggestions are based on the experience of the backbone organization in using collective impact as a structure for coalition building in developing ISTO in its first three years of development.

 

Funding and Previous Experience Building Coalitions

 

Waves for Change staff took on the role of the backbone organization for the launch of ISTO. Waves for Change brought previous experience planning, hosting, and managing coalition building. They also had funding set aside to support the first conference. They sought surf therapy programs actively engaged in collecting and sharing data. From previous experience, Waves for Change recognized the benefit of upfront work from potential participants. They hosted several discussions to align on strategy as well as showcase the amount of work required to secure an invitation to the initiative. Participating programs were encouraged to suggest other programs as well as provide feedback to the structure and objectives of the conference. To incentivize participation, they offered a fully paid for travel and lodging in Cape Town. The benefits of participating as well as the pathway to joining were communicated transparently. Without funding or previous coalition building experience from the backbone organization, the success of the initiative would be less likely. Both ‘mobilize funding’ and ‘guiding vision and strategy’ are featured in the SSIR key roles for backbone organizations (Turner et al., 2012).

 

Humble Leaders with Bold Vision

 

As Waves for Change developed from a small startup to a more sustainable organization, it frequently used the phrase humble and bold to describe the ideal leadership style. At Waves for Change, this phrase encourages leaders at all levels to commit to large scale action and be confident they are moving forward with the organization’s strategy. However, they also augment their bold vision with humility. On the humble side, leaders are encouraged to listen to feedback and respond to program assessments with an open mind. The program maintains it is data driven by frequently conducting third party assessments and adapting their strategy based on the findings. For ISTO, aware of the competitiveness in the sector, Waves for Change quickly established itself as a humble backbone organization. While responsible for all of the costs, organization, and strategy of the initiative; they actively solicited feedback and encourage participants to share leadership of conference components. They proposed the collective impact framework early and aligned on objectives through consensus building. To achieve a shared vision, they built a shared logic model for the group based on responses from a standardized survey around individual programs’ objectives and methodology. Using this shared framework, Waves for Change as the backbone organization demonstrated common goals across the organizations. The group set a shared vision which while beyond the reach of even the top surf therapy organizations would be achievable through working together.

 

Timing Needs to be Right

 

As mentioned, the first attempt at a surf therapy network failed. However, Waves for Change made a second attempt as they felt the sector was well positioned for the emergent opportunity. As identified by SSIR the sector could benefit from forming a coalition as an unnoticed practice that could be used locally (Kania & Kramer, 2013). Also, Waves for Change saw surf therapy as a strategy working locally, but could be spread widely.

 

Be Focused and Realistic with Targets

 

ISTO proposed a bold mission but maintained reasonable working objectives. The milestones were often met, despite working with a fully volunteer group. It was often difficult to match the excitement of participating programs with achievable working targets. One method Waves for Change employed was a simple near-term deliverables approach with individuals signing up for outputs and deadlines. The working groups were able to check-in and maintain accountability although some projects progressed further than others and some stalled.

 

In the follow-up survey participants suggested ISTO ‘keep the mission manageable.’ This is reinforced from existing literature (Baker & Horne, 2016). Following the excitement of conferences, leadership worked to provide reality checks in terms of resources, time commitments, and near-term milestones. The focus of goals and objectives being attainable, concreate and measurable has been described by Wolff (2001a).

 

Streamline Decision Making

 

Decision making was slow when disagreements arose. As the group sought to encourage everyone to have a voice, most key decisions took a significant amount of time and effort. As ISTO matured into the second and third year, they developed structures and processes to make important decisions fairly and quickly. None of these were unique to ISTO and we would suggest adopting and agreeing to them early in the process to facilitate action. As described by Wolff (2001a), successful coalitions are able to streamline decision making and decisions, reviewing responsibilities and roles and codifying processes across membership.

 

Conclusion

 

Using the collective impact framework to establish ISTO brought several benefits and challenges. From an opportunity identified by Waves for Change, a small nonprofit based in South Africa, to an international body with 60 programs, multiple research projects, regular conference presentations, and a shared set of evaluation tools, the collective impact framework provided a platform for coalition building. While ISTO is a new organization, it has achieved several milestones but also encountered numerous conflicts. Some of the benefits and challenges can be attributed directly to using the collective impact framework. For example, the backbone organization was critical for launching, organizing, and funding the organization. However, some participants felt the decision making was often too concentrated and top down. Another core component of collective impact, a common agenda, was viewed as being fundamental to the progress of ISTO and a source of disagreement for other participants. Even the concept of mutually reinforcing activities, viewed by the majority of participants as a key ingredient for progress, raised some challenges as larger organizations felt they contributed more than other organizations who received more of the benefit at the sector level. Additional challenges now facing ISTO include lack of inclusion of program participants’ voices, lack of a social justice exploration of core causes to common issues, and challenges in balancing backbone organization funding and capabilities with collaborative decision making.

 

For developing coalitions, it may be useful to explore several frameworks and assess their fit with your goals and assets. In developing ISTO, we feel some of the key components for success could be used within the collective impact framework but could also be applied to other methods of coalition building. These components include having participants with funding and coalition building experience, proposing a bold vision but approaching partners with humility, getting timing right, and being focused and realistic with targets.

 

References

 

Baker, S. M., & Horne, K. K. (2016). Second-Generation Collective Impact. Standford Social Innovation Review. Retrieved from http://www.ssir.org/articles/entry/second_generation_collective_impact

 

International Surf Therapy Organization. (2019). Participant Feedback Survey. International Surf Therapy Organization: Manhattan Beach, CA.

 

Kania, J. & Kramer, M. (2011). Collective Impact. Stanford Social Innovation Review. Retrieved from http://www.ssir.org/articles/entry/collective_impact

 

Kania, J. & Kramer, M. (2013). Embracing Emergence: How Collective Impact Addresses Complexity. Stanford Social Innovation Review. Retrieved from http://ssir.org/articles/entry/embracing_emergence_how_collective_impact_addresses_complexity

 

Turner, S., Merchant, K., Kania, J., & Martin, E. (2012). Understanding the Value of Backbone Organizations in Collective Impact: Part I. Stanford Social Innovation Review. Retrieved from http://ssir,org/blog/entry/understanding_the_value_of_backbone_organizations_incollective impact_1

 

Wolff, T. (2001a). A Practitioner’s Guide to Successful Coalition. American Journal of Community Psychology, 29(2), 173 – 191.

 

Wolff, T. (2001b). Community Coalition Building – Contemporary Practice and Research: Introduction. American Journal of Community Psychology, 29(2), 165 – 172.

 

Wolff, T. (2016). Ten Places Where Collective Impact Gets It Wrong. Global Journal of Community Psychology Practice, 7(1), 1 - 11. 


Author(s)

Matthew Mattila Matthew Mattila

Matthew Mattila, helped develop ISTO as part of the Waves for Change team in South Africa. His role as COO includes contributing to research, launching global projects, and aligning Waves for Change’s strategy with the sector. Mr Mattila led coalition development across government, private sector, researcher institutions, and think tanks. He brings a strategy background with roles at The Boston Consulting Group, Rocky Mountain Institute, adidas, NYCT and Oakley. He studied Business at UNC Chapel Hill.


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Keywords: collaboration and coalition development, program evaluation, organizational development, small and large group processes