Governance Coordination Challenges in the UK’s ‘Mission-Led Government’

Jack Newman, Sarah A Ayres, Geoff Bates

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

Abstract

This article assesses the extent to which ‘mission-led government’ offers solutions to the UK’s governance coordination challenges. By setting goals that stimulate multi-actor responses, mission-led government aims to tackle cross-cutting societal challenges, such as public ill-health, environmental degradation, and stalling growth. Through analysis of policy documents, using the government’s health mission as a core example, this article considers this agenda against five governance coordination challenges: (i) over time, (ii) between policy priorities, (iii) across government agencies, (iv) across different tiers of government, and (v) between state and non-state actors. The impact of mission-led government varies across these challenges: there are examples of progress in coordination over time and across government tiers, but significant limitations and ambiguities across the agenda. A core problem is that mission-oriented policymaking is interpreted as a solution to coordination challenges, when it is better understood as a framework within which solutions can be developed
Original languageEnglish
JournalPublic Money and Management
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 23 Jan 2026

Research Groups and Themes

  • SPS Governance and Public Policy Research Centre

Keywords

  • mission-led
  • mission-oriented
  • Labour government
  • short-termism
  • trade-offs
  • joined-up government
  • multi-level governance
  • public-private

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