Who should be involved in the sharing arrangement?
Issues related to this question should be addressed in Phase One of the Roadmap to Develop Cross-Jurisdictional Sharing Initiatives.
Examples of issues to consider:
- What is the history of relationships among the jurisdictions affected by this effort?
- What are the motivations of each key partner?
- Is there political willingness among stakeholders and those affected by the issue to explore CJS as a possible solution? Is CJS a feasible option?
- What are the guiding principles that the CJS effort would have? Do all the partners share these principles?
- What other individuals and groups does the issue affect, and how?
- Is the model being considered feasible? Will it have the support of stakeholders and those affected by the CJS initiative?
Resources to help answer these questions can be found below the line.
For an overview of the Roadmap or to find resources for another phase or area, select a link from the list below:
The resources are part of the Center’s CJS Resource Library, which contains best practices, lessons learned and tools that can help jurisdictions considering or adopting cross-jurisdictional sharing (CJS) arrangements. While most tools and resources in the library primarily focus on public health CJS, some address public sector CJS more broadly.
The following icons in the resource title signify:
The resource is a tool.
The resource is an example document from an actual cross-jurisdictional sharing initiative.
The resource is a report.
The resource is an article.
The resource is a webinar, video or audio file.
The resource is a website.