Designing Collaborative Processes for Adaptive Management: Four Structures for Multistakeholder Collaboration

Parties should consider a collaborative approach to scientific inquiry and learning when there are multiple jurisdictions, resource users, and viewpoints about the best way to manage a social-ecological system. A collaborative process provides a forum for scientists, managers, and other stakeholders...

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Main Author: Jennifer D. Pratt Miles
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2013-12-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss4/art5/
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spelling doaj-7799f88371444232a60270bfaa5c22b72020-11-24T22:15:21ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872013-12-01184510.5751/ES-05709-1804055709Designing Collaborative Processes for Adaptive Management: Four Structures for Multistakeholder CollaborationJennifer D. Pratt Miles0Meridian InstituteParties should consider a collaborative approach to scientific inquiry and learning when there are multiple jurisdictions, resource users, and viewpoints about the best way to manage a social-ecological system. A collaborative process provides a forum for scientists, managers, and other stakeholders to raise and explain concerns, articulate management goals, and suggest strategies to address concerns and management actions to achieve goals. Collaborative problem solving engages parties in dialogue that facilitates understanding of different perspectives and creates an opportunity to reframe problems as hypotheses to be tested through the adaptive management process. I review four potential structures for multistakeholder collaboration that have been used by medium- to large-scale adaptive management programs in the U.S., and identify factors to consider when determining if one of these structures would be appropriate for a particular situation. These mechanisms include: establishing a Federal Advisory Committee, forming a multistakeholder body convened by a nonfederal entity, creating a body through legislation or cooperative agreement, and seeking an exemption from the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA). When designing a collaborative process, parties should consider the degree of collaborative decision making desired, amount of resources that will be required, length of time necessary to design and establish the group, who will make decisions, and how decisions will be made.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss4/art5/adaptive managementcollaborationcollaborative processecosystem managementnatural resource managementstakeholder
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer D. Pratt Miles
spellingShingle Jennifer D. Pratt Miles
Designing Collaborative Processes for Adaptive Management: Four Structures for Multistakeholder Collaboration
Ecology and Society
adaptive management
collaboration
collaborative process
ecosystem management
natural resource management
stakeholder
author_facet Jennifer D. Pratt Miles
author_sort Jennifer D. Pratt Miles
title Designing Collaborative Processes for Adaptive Management: Four Structures for Multistakeholder Collaboration
title_short Designing Collaborative Processes for Adaptive Management: Four Structures for Multistakeholder Collaboration
title_full Designing Collaborative Processes for Adaptive Management: Four Structures for Multistakeholder Collaboration
title_fullStr Designing Collaborative Processes for Adaptive Management: Four Structures for Multistakeholder Collaboration
title_full_unstemmed Designing Collaborative Processes for Adaptive Management: Four Structures for Multistakeholder Collaboration
title_sort designing collaborative processes for adaptive management: four structures for multistakeholder collaboration
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2013-12-01
description Parties should consider a collaborative approach to scientific inquiry and learning when there are multiple jurisdictions, resource users, and viewpoints about the best way to manage a social-ecological system. A collaborative process provides a forum for scientists, managers, and other stakeholders to raise and explain concerns, articulate management goals, and suggest strategies to address concerns and management actions to achieve goals. Collaborative problem solving engages parties in dialogue that facilitates understanding of different perspectives and creates an opportunity to reframe problems as hypotheses to be tested through the adaptive management process. I review four potential structures for multistakeholder collaboration that have been used by medium- to large-scale adaptive management programs in the U.S., and identify factors to consider when determining if one of these structures would be appropriate for a particular situation. These mechanisms include: establishing a Federal Advisory Committee, forming a multistakeholder body convened by a nonfederal entity, creating a body through legislation or cooperative agreement, and seeking an exemption from the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA). When designing a collaborative process, parties should consider the degree of collaborative decision making desired, amount of resources that will be required, length of time necessary to design and establish the group, who will make decisions, and how decisions will be made.
topic adaptive management
collaboration
collaborative process
ecosystem management
natural resource management
stakeholder
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss4/art5/
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