Using conflict over risk management in the marine environment to strengthen measures of governance

Management of and planning for the Canadian marine environment can be disrupted by conflict, but conflict is inevitable given the plurality of actors, interests, values, and uses of marine space. Unresolved conflict may impede governance objectives and threaten the sustainability of social-ecologica...

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Main Authors: Courtenay E. Parlee, Melanie G. Wiber
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2018-12-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol23/iss4/art5/
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spelling doaj-2a32adcb8fff4a4aba57b59607e58fa62020-11-25T02:42:01ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872018-12-01234510.5751/ES-10334-23040510334Using conflict over risk management in the marine environment to strengthen measures of governanceCourtenay E. Parlee0Melanie G. Wiber1Department of Anthropology, University of New BrunswickDepartment of Anthropology, University of New BrunswickManagement of and planning for the Canadian marine environment can be disrupted by conflict, but conflict is inevitable given the plurality of actors, interests, values, and uses of marine space. Unresolved conflict may impede governance objectives and threaten the sustainability of social-ecological systems. Innovative institutional arrangements such as adaptive comanagement theoretically reduce conflict and support sustainable management. The southwest New Brunswick Bay of Fundy Marine Advisory Committee (MAC) was assembled in 2004 to address conflict between marine users and to further marine planning. As an innovative planning institution influenced by comanagement theory, the MAC experience served as a case study to develop governance measures for the Canadian Fisheries Research Network Comprehensive Fisheries Sustainability Framework, which includes a consideration of ecological, social, economic, and governance dimensions of sustainability. One of the most important but neglected aspects of sustainability measurements involves the assessment of governance and planning effectiveness. An assessment of the MAC experience through a comprehensive sustainability evaluation framework offers significant lessons for advancing the theoretical and empirical literature on adaptive comanagement through deeper consideration of challenges in creating institutions of "good governance." In doing so, the case study also contributes to the Comprehensive Fisheries Sustainability Framework by testing some measures of governance effectiveness, including co-operation, resources, transparency, accountability, and inclusivity.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol23/iss4/art5/adaptive co-managementconflict resolutionfisheriesgovernanceindicatorssustainability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Courtenay E. Parlee
Melanie G. Wiber
spellingShingle Courtenay E. Parlee
Melanie G. Wiber
Using conflict over risk management in the marine environment to strengthen measures of governance
Ecology and Society
adaptive co-management
conflict resolution
fisheries
governance
indicators
sustainability
author_facet Courtenay E. Parlee
Melanie G. Wiber
author_sort Courtenay E. Parlee
title Using conflict over risk management in the marine environment to strengthen measures of governance
title_short Using conflict over risk management in the marine environment to strengthen measures of governance
title_full Using conflict over risk management in the marine environment to strengthen measures of governance
title_fullStr Using conflict over risk management in the marine environment to strengthen measures of governance
title_full_unstemmed Using conflict over risk management in the marine environment to strengthen measures of governance
title_sort using conflict over risk management in the marine environment to strengthen measures of governance
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Management of and planning for the Canadian marine environment can be disrupted by conflict, but conflict is inevitable given the plurality of actors, interests, values, and uses of marine space. Unresolved conflict may impede governance objectives and threaten the sustainability of social-ecological systems. Innovative institutional arrangements such as adaptive comanagement theoretically reduce conflict and support sustainable management. The southwest New Brunswick Bay of Fundy Marine Advisory Committee (MAC) was assembled in 2004 to address conflict between marine users and to further marine planning. As an innovative planning institution influenced by comanagement theory, the MAC experience served as a case study to develop governance measures for the Canadian Fisheries Research Network Comprehensive Fisheries Sustainability Framework, which includes a consideration of ecological, social, economic, and governance dimensions of sustainability. One of the most important but neglected aspects of sustainability measurements involves the assessment of governance and planning effectiveness. An assessment of the MAC experience through a comprehensive sustainability evaluation framework offers significant lessons for advancing the theoretical and empirical literature on adaptive comanagement through deeper consideration of challenges in creating institutions of "good governance." In doing so, the case study also contributes to the Comprehensive Fisheries Sustainability Framework by testing some measures of governance effectiveness, including co-operation, resources, transparency, accountability, and inclusivity.
topic adaptive co-management
conflict resolution
fisheries
governance
indicators
sustainability
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol23/iss4/art5/
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