Individuals
CD at the individual level entails the core knowledge, skills, attitudes and energies needed to work effectively.
The TAP Common Framework recognizes three dimensions of CD: individuals, organizations and the enabling environment. The dimensions must be viewed as interconnected, affecting each other in complex ways through push and pull factors. Within the context of AIS, it is pertinent to stress the crucial importance of partnerships and networks in creating that interconnectedness, and in bringing together the three dimensions to create new knowledge.
CD at the individual level entails the core knowledge, skills, attitudes and energies needed to work effectively.
CD at organizational level addresses how organizations coordinate and useindividual competencies in such a way that organizations’ collective potential is realized. This includes the ‘collective’ ability of a group or system to function as effective organizations and provide the space for organizational learning, adapt to changing circumstances, build effective partnerships and take risks, not only to act towards organizational goals, but also to acquire and manage the necessary resources.
CD at the enabling environment level refers to the context in which individuals and organizations put their competencies and capabilities into action.It includes the institutional set-up of a country, its implicit and explicit rules, its power structures and the policy and legal environment in which individuals and organizations function (FAO, 2010).