Distinguish Needs from Services
Semantic Confusion Matters
Both needs and services define territories; but not necessarily coterminous territories—because needs and services are inherently very different. So never confuse them!
Sloppy Use of Language Causes Trouble
Needs and services actually complement each other because …
- A need is a lack or a want of something important.
- A service is an activity to deal with that lack or want.
Needs for Services or Services for Needs?
No organization or agency (i.e. service) can respond to any need comprehensively.
Example: The need to communicate well (i.e. the social value of communication) will be met via educational services, speech therapy services, social services, elocution services, and more.
Few organizations or services ever deal with just one need,
Example: Primary schools address many needs: socialization, literacy, numeracy, citizenship, physical fitness, social skills, health.
Needs are a form of , with the THEE-name « ». enable people to live together in a community, and have the following features:
- Exist apart from specific personal or social choices.
- Not produced or decided by organizations.
- May be addressed by a variety of services.
- Needs never conflict, even when seemingly opposing.
- Generate a desire in others to agree or respond.
- Refusal to recognize a genuine need appears absurd or perverse.
Services are a form of , with the THEE-name « ». are properties of organizations or agencies, and have the following features:
- Define an organization that requires management.
- Set up deliberately to serve needs.
- Generate tangible activities that cost money.
- Serve as a focus for work, expertise and a work-identity.
- Conflicts between services may occur.
- May address multiple needs.
People naturally identify with their profession and expertise. They are trained over many years and rewarded for recognizing certain ranges of needs and specific aspects of those needs. In time, they come to see «communal or personal needs» as identical to «needs for their services».
Taking a need-oriented perspective, as politics requires, absolutely demands multi-disciplinary, multi-service, and often multi-agency teamwork at all tiers.
Such a realistic approach is fraught with misunderstandings and hence conflict. When things go wrong, the problem is commonly attributed to "a breakdown in communication and cooperation between agencies." But the underlying reason is often a failure to understand and apply the principles of the way needs and services interact.
Linking this Analysis to Political Territories
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Needs and services are fundamentally different in nature and one must not be used as a synonym or surrogate for the other.
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Needs are articulated through living within . So needs are political in nature.
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More.
and do not necessarily coincide, and should never be forced to do so. -
There are More.
—and every person in a society is simultaneously a member of each, like it or not. -
Needs must be analysed and different aspects of each basic type of social need must be explicitly assigned to one of the tiers. Examples.
- Distinguish social territories and service territories.
- More on providing services for the public.
Originally posted: August-2009; Last updated: 15-Nov-2010