Special Issue “Public Policy Analysis of Integrated Water Resource Management”

Public policy analysis is interested in how policies emerge and develop in order to address societal problems. Issues related to water, such as the contamination of surface waters, floods, or plastic pollution in oceans are often highly complex, concern different jurisdictions, and require the colla...

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Main Authors: Karin Ingold, Jale Tosun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-08-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/9/2321
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spelling doaj-2d715afdc15d4515903699c16242c1502020-11-25T03:46:25ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412020-08-01122321232110.3390/w12092321Special Issue “Public Policy Analysis of Integrated Water Resource Management”Karin Ingold0Jale Tosun1Institute of Political Science, University of Bern, Fabrikstrasse 8, 3012 Bern, SwitzerlandInstitute of Political Science, Heidelberg University, Bergheimer Strasse 58, 69115 Heidelberg, GermanyPublic policy analysis is interested in how policies emerge and develop in order to address societal problems. Issues related to water, such as the contamination of surface waters, floods, or plastic pollution in oceans are often highly complex, concern different jurisdictions, and require the collaboration of public and private actors. This complexity is addressed through integrated water management principles. However, these principles give room to open questions such as: what are the main challenges of policy analysis (research and practice) in terms of multi-level actor involvement (politics), cross-sectoral solutions (policies), and new institutional arrangements (polity)? To answer these questions, the seven papers of this Special Issue combine approaches borrowed from policy analysis with principles of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM). Each article tackles a complex, water-related problem and collectively, the papers present empirical evidence from case studies located around the world. We learn from all these analyses that adopting a policy perspective helps disentangling the procedural components of IWRM (the involvement of actors, the definition of the appropriate management area, the attribution of competences, etc.) from more substantial ones (like the development of a management plan and the implementation of measures). Addressing cross-sectoral and multi-level challenges is a difficult task, and policy analysis can help shedding light on both, the legitimacy of processes, and the effectiveness of their outputs and outcomes.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/9/2321complexitycross-sectoral policiesIntegrated Water Resources Managementmulti-level actor involvementpolicy analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karin Ingold
Jale Tosun
spellingShingle Karin Ingold
Jale Tosun
Special Issue “Public Policy Analysis of Integrated Water Resource Management”
Water
complexity
cross-sectoral policies
Integrated Water Resources Management
multi-level actor involvement
policy analysis
author_facet Karin Ingold
Jale Tosun
author_sort Karin Ingold
title Special Issue “Public Policy Analysis of Integrated Water Resource Management”
title_short Special Issue “Public Policy Analysis of Integrated Water Resource Management”
title_full Special Issue “Public Policy Analysis of Integrated Water Resource Management”
title_fullStr Special Issue “Public Policy Analysis of Integrated Water Resource Management”
title_full_unstemmed Special Issue “Public Policy Analysis of Integrated Water Resource Management”
title_sort special issue “public policy analysis of integrated water resource management”
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Public policy analysis is interested in how policies emerge and develop in order to address societal problems. Issues related to water, such as the contamination of surface waters, floods, or plastic pollution in oceans are often highly complex, concern different jurisdictions, and require the collaboration of public and private actors. This complexity is addressed through integrated water management principles. However, these principles give room to open questions such as: what are the main challenges of policy analysis (research and practice) in terms of multi-level actor involvement (politics), cross-sectoral solutions (policies), and new institutional arrangements (polity)? To answer these questions, the seven papers of this Special Issue combine approaches borrowed from policy analysis with principles of Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM). Each article tackles a complex, water-related problem and collectively, the papers present empirical evidence from case studies located around the world. We learn from all these analyses that adopting a policy perspective helps disentangling the procedural components of IWRM (the involvement of actors, the definition of the appropriate management area, the attribution of competences, etc.) from more substantial ones (like the development of a management plan and the implementation of measures). Addressing cross-sectoral and multi-level challenges is a difficult task, and policy analysis can help shedding light on both, the legitimacy of processes, and the effectiveness of their outputs and outcomes.
topic complexity
cross-sectoral policies
Integrated Water Resources Management
multi-level actor involvement
policy analysis
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/9/2321
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