Introduction
In the fifth session, Howard Koh, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard Kennedy School; Jorrit de Jong, Faculty Director of the Bloomberg Harvard City Leadership Initiative and Senior Lecturer in Public Policy and Management at Harvard Kennedy School; Josh Sharfstein, Vice Dean for Public Health Practice and Community Engagement at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health; and Tom Frieden, former director of CDC and president and CEO of Resolve to Save Lives, explored collaboration—across sectors, departments, and levels of government—and the challenges, conflicts, and opportunities for effective leadership and a resilient recovery that come with this work. Bill Gates stressed the importance of relying on science to guide reopening the economy in his welcoming remarks to mayors.
Key Takeaways
Facing Conflict
The most energy-intensive work you have to do as mayor involves convening and collaborating with others across departments, sectors, and levels of government. These efforts leave you and your staff working overtime to navigate tangles of red tape and manage tensions around resources and finances, turf, personalities, and access to power.
Leading collaborative work in the midst of an unfolding and evolving crisis while keeping the urgent needs of your community front and center strains the best of us, but it also offers our best chance at an effective response and a resilient recovery.