This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. <WRAP catbadge purple>Governance, Innovation & Change </WRAP> ====== Change ====== <WRAP meta> lead-authors: [Name] contributors: [Names] reviewers: [Names] version: 0.3 updated: 25 March 2026 sensitivity: low status: draft ai-use: Claude Sonnet 4.6 (Anthropic) was used for editorial revision, reference verification, and formatting; reviewed by Vitaliy Soloviy, 17.03.2026 </WRAP> <WRAP intro> This topic is part of the ISGAN Wiki and is currently being developed. You can contribute directly by clicking the edit button, or use the [[about:newtopic|Topic Builder]] for guided input. A confirmed wiki account is required. Register and allow up to three days for admin confirmation. Before contributing, read the [[about:guidelines|ISGAN Wiki Editorial Guidelines]]. </WRAP> <WRAP insight> Theories of change attempt to systematize factors and dependencies that affect real-world processes. </WRAP> ===== Why this matters ===== <WRAP callout> [To be drafted] </WRAP> ===== Shared definitions ===== Theory of Change is a way of thinking that systematically attempts to map the critical factors (psychological, social, economic, and cultural processes) by which change comes about. If there is an explanatory model of how change happens, it is easier to identify the critical factors that can lead to or determine change and then intervene in them. Working within a Theory of Change framework means thinking strategically about the key components of an activity, project, or programme: its goals and intended impact, its resources and capabilities, and how those resources and capabilities can be mobilised.((Simeone, L., Drabble, D., Morelli, N., & De Götzen, A. (2023). Introduction to strategic thinking, design and the Theory of Change. In L. Simeone et al. (Eds.), //Strategic thinking, design and the Theory of Change// (pp. 1–19). Edward Elgar Publishing. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781803927718.00006)) Theory of Change approaches can be understood across a continuum of purpose, from a precise planning tool at one end through to a reflexive at the other. Four broad categories of purpose have been identified: strategic planning (mapping the change process and expected outcomes), monitoring and evaluation (reviewing progress and revising the theory), description (communicating the change process to partners), and learning (clarifying and developing the theory behind a programme).((Stein, D., & Valters, C. (2012). //Understanding Theory of Change in international development//. JSRP Paper 1. London School of Economics. http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/56359)) ===== Perspectives ===== <WRAP perspectives> ==== Actors and stakeholders ==== ==== Technologies and infrastructure ==== ==== Institutional structures ==== </WRAP> ===== Distinctions and overlaps ===== ===== Related topics ===== [[topics:transitions|Transitions]] · [[topics:governance|Governance]] · [[topics:innovation|Innovation]] · [[topics:scenarios|Scenarios]] · [[topics:readiness|Readiness]] ===== Topic notes ===== **Content notes from source material:** * Source material includes three images from a LinkedIn article (Ann Murray Brown, 2016) comparing Theory of Change with logic models. LinkedIn posts are not citable sources and image licences are unknown — do not use without finding the original published source. The distinction between Theory of Change and logic models is worth capturing if a verifiable source can be found. * Three merge flags in source: foresight, pathways, electricity network planning. None of these are standalone wiki pages — foresight and pathways content may belong here or in [[topics:scenarios|Scenarios]] and [[topics:transition_pathways|Transition pathways]] respectively. Electricity network planning is outside this topic's scope.