Cath Cooney shares her views on the transformation that must happen now and in the future to realise Scotland's ambitions for social care.

Powerful narratives paint a realistic picture of the systems at play: entrenched ways of working, inequitable provision and accountability and loss of local responsiveness across civic society; and some signs of hope of in the examples of communities where we are seeing the potential of the future play out now[1].

My standpoint is from a human systems approach, looking at social care as an area of concern, and wondering how a future perspective approach could help us get in to a more authentic, collaborative space for change.

As Scotland, and the world, looks to COVID recovery and renewal, we hear aspirations of a transformative response, such as in the recent RSE Futures Commission Report.

In my work with International Futures Forum[2], there is a focus in transformative innovation as a practice that can support systemic transition – building the plane even as we fly it. I’m seeing how the use of a three horizons framework[3] is helping individuals, communities, organisations and NGOs look across the landscape of change, through the lens of three perspectives on the future potential of the present moment. It helps move towards building the infrastructure of a third horizon rather than sustaining a failing first horizon. I hear this language coming through in recent commentary[4]this needs to go hand in hand with changes to current structures, rather than throwing money on top of systems that don’t work’.

But of course, we’re now in the weeds of it, facing deep challenge and risk in making a National Care service a reality that holds true in the face of what feels like intractible obstacles. We face immediate and acute challenges alongside the inevitability of long-term shifts in patterns of operation. Systems, all systems it seems, are in transition. These are powerful times and we need a compass and a map.

Scanning for where we might get a sense of a map and find clues about the success paths we need to take; I’m encouraged to a degree.

Some of that futures insight was embedded in the Feeley [5]Recommendations.

The problem isn’t that we don’t have good ideas; it’s we haven’t acted on them at scale and with genuine commitment…we rely too much on bottom-up developments that we expect to flourish without systemic support.

The re-issuing of 12 Propositions for Social Care from the ALLIANCE is indeed prescient with its central themes of ‘commissioning, coproduction, personalisation, human rights, improvement, culture change and governance for change’.

In his latest book, Facilitating Breakthrough[6], Adam Kahane talks about about the practice of ‘transformative facilitation’ – how to remove obstacles, bridge differences and move forward together towards shared goals.  Crucially, he talks about the nature of those ‘shared goals’ as being about ‘learning to live together in a way that love, power and justice enhance and support one another’.

As we look to the new care service, I hear a call for local and national infrastructure that supports love, power and justice.

Transformative facilitation is not getting participants to working together but helping them remove the obstacles to doing so. You can’t push a stream to flow, but if you remove the blockages, it will flow by itself. [7]

Many blockages exist in making the National Care Service fit for the 21st Century, can we see where such transformative facilitation is happening and effective in this space?

The 12 Propositions for Social Care paper highlights the need to drive forward at pace. Could a transformative facilitation approach be a source of some much-needed forward momentum?

[1] https://scottishcommunityalliance.org.uk/2021/08/31/local-accountability-is-the-key/

[2] https://www.internationalfuturesforum.com

[3] https://www.iffpraxis.com/three-horizons

[4] https://www.scotsman.com/news/opinion/columnists/current-care-systems-arent-working-for-people-they-serve-and-need-radical-change-professor-ian-welsh-obe-3442202

[5] https://www.gov.scot/groups/independent-review-of-adult-social-care/

[6] https://reospartners.com/reos-management/adam-kahane/

[7] https://reospartners.com/reos-management/adam-kahane/

End of page.

You may also like:

Written by: Kerry Ritchie, Programme Manager – Lived Experience, Integration and Engagement Hub Published: 14/04/2026

As part of our 20 year anniversary, Kerry shares her reflections on how far the ALLIANCE has come, our achievements, and our impact.

Continue reading
Written by: Sara Redmond, Chief Officer, the ALLIANCE Published: 02/04/2026

In her latest TFN column, our Chief Officer Sara Redmond reflects on 20 years since Scotland moved to put children at the centre of policy.

Continue reading
Written by: Hannah Buckingham, Senior External Affairs Adviser, Macmillan Cancer Support Published: 30/03/2026

Cancer care in Scotland is at a critical moment. Macmillan is calling for urgent action ahead of the parliamentary elections in May

Continue reading
Written by: Mhairi Campbell, Lecturer in Law at the University of the West of Scotland and is a lead author of Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder and the Welfare State: Recommendations for Reform. She leads the teaching on social security law. Published: 27/03/2026

Mhairi Campbell reflects on Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) not being recognised as having a severe impact on life.

Continue reading
Written by: Louise Hall, Pain Health & Wellbeing Coach, Pain Association Scotland Published: 11/03/2026

Louise Hall from Pain Association Scotland reflects on the event she delivered as part of Self Management Week 2025.

Continue reading
Written by: Lauren Ferrier, Events and Communications Officer and Jane Miller, Academy Programme Manager, the ALLIANCE and Gozie Joe-Adigwe, Digital Network Officer, the ALLIANCE and Rhona McMillan, Development Officer, the ALLIANCE Published: 20/02/2026

Read some reflections from ALLIANCE colleagues, who had the opportunity to sponsor and attend Scotland's Annual Human Rights Conference.

Continue reading
Back to all opinions