Facilitating Transitional Processes in Rigid Institutional Regimes for Water Management and Wetland Conservation: Experience from the Guadalquivir Estuary

Traditional policies for water resources management and wetland conservation are often based on command-and-control approaches. The latter tend to drive the human-wetland-water system into pathological states, characterized by more vulnerable ecosystems and rigid institutions for governance. The ove...

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Main Authors: Pablo F. Méndez, Nicola Isendahl, Jaime M. Amezaga, Luis Santamaría
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2012-03-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
ana
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss1/art26/
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spelling doaj-797b5e1c77f146a8970d41b36f67b5b12020-11-25T01:02:11ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872012-03-011712610.5751/ES-04494-1701264494Facilitating Transitional Processes in Rigid Institutional Regimes for Water Management and Wetland Conservation: Experience from the Guadalquivir EstuaryPablo F. Méndez0Nicola Isendahl1Jaime M. Amezaga2Luis Santamaría3Laboratory of Spatial Ecology, Mediterranean Institute for Advanced Studies (Spanish Research Council, University of the Balearic Islands)Institute of Environmental Systems Research (University of Osnabrück)Institute for Research on Environment and Sustainability, University of NewcastleLaboratory of Spatial Ecology, Mediterranean Institute for Advanced Studies (Spanish Research Council, University of the Balearic Islands)Traditional policies for water resources management and wetland conservation are often based on command-and-control approaches. The latter tend to drive the human-wetland-water system into pathological states, characterized by more vulnerable ecosystems and rigid institutions for governance. The overcoming of these states may rest in the development of flexible and adaptive institutional regimes that rely on adaptive governance and management. Because past factors might constrain the implementation of more flexible adaptive approaches to management, it is important to understand the historical mechanisms underlying the genesis of institutional rigidity. We first present the results of a historical analysis of Doñana, which can be characterized as a pathological water socio-ecosystem governed through rigid institutional regimes for water resources management and wetland conservation. In a second step, we analyze the advances achieved during a recent, large-scale restoration program for the Doñana wetlands, which adhered explicitly to the tenets of adaptive management. Our analysis indicated that the historical persistence of command-and-control approaches has been a path-dependent process that led to the emergence of a rigid institutional regime and caused it to enter a rigidity trap. However, the achievements of the restoration program suggest that a more flexible and adaptive regime could be developed through the introduction of adaptive management at the operational levels, using specifically tailored action research programs. To conclude, we speculate that the research strategy outlined could be extended to comply with, or complement, the requirements of the EU's Water Framework Directive in other European water socio-ecosystems.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss1/art26/action researchadaptive cycleadaptive managementcommand and controlDo&#241anaGuadalquivir Estuarypath dependencerigid institutional regimesWater Framework Directive
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pablo F. Méndez
Nicola Isendahl
Jaime M. Amezaga
Luis Santamaría
spellingShingle Pablo F. Méndez
Nicola Isendahl
Jaime M. Amezaga
Luis Santamaría
Facilitating Transitional Processes in Rigid Institutional Regimes for Water Management and Wetland Conservation: Experience from the Guadalquivir Estuary
Ecology and Society
action research
adaptive cycle
adaptive management
command and control
Do&#241
ana
Guadalquivir Estuary
path dependence
rigid institutional regimes
Water Framework Directive
author_facet Pablo F. Méndez
Nicola Isendahl
Jaime M. Amezaga
Luis Santamaría
author_sort Pablo F. Méndez
title Facilitating Transitional Processes in Rigid Institutional Regimes for Water Management and Wetland Conservation: Experience from the Guadalquivir Estuary
title_short Facilitating Transitional Processes in Rigid Institutional Regimes for Water Management and Wetland Conservation: Experience from the Guadalquivir Estuary
title_full Facilitating Transitional Processes in Rigid Institutional Regimes for Water Management and Wetland Conservation: Experience from the Guadalquivir Estuary
title_fullStr Facilitating Transitional Processes in Rigid Institutional Regimes for Water Management and Wetland Conservation: Experience from the Guadalquivir Estuary
title_full_unstemmed Facilitating Transitional Processes in Rigid Institutional Regimes for Water Management and Wetland Conservation: Experience from the Guadalquivir Estuary
title_sort facilitating transitional processes in rigid institutional regimes for water management and wetland conservation: experience from the guadalquivir estuary
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2012-03-01
description Traditional policies for water resources management and wetland conservation are often based on command-and-control approaches. The latter tend to drive the human-wetland-water system into pathological states, characterized by more vulnerable ecosystems and rigid institutions for governance. The overcoming of these states may rest in the development of flexible and adaptive institutional regimes that rely on adaptive governance and management. Because past factors might constrain the implementation of more flexible adaptive approaches to management, it is important to understand the historical mechanisms underlying the genesis of institutional rigidity. We first present the results of a historical analysis of Doñana, which can be characterized as a pathological water socio-ecosystem governed through rigid institutional regimes for water resources management and wetland conservation. In a second step, we analyze the advances achieved during a recent, large-scale restoration program for the Doñana wetlands, which adhered explicitly to the tenets of adaptive management. Our analysis indicated that the historical persistence of command-and-control approaches has been a path-dependent process that led to the emergence of a rigid institutional regime and caused it to enter a rigidity trap. However, the achievements of the restoration program suggest that a more flexible and adaptive regime could be developed through the introduction of adaptive management at the operational levels, using specifically tailored action research programs. To conclude, we speculate that the research strategy outlined could be extended to comply with, or complement, the requirements of the EU's Water Framework Directive in other European water socio-ecosystems.
topic action research
adaptive cycle
adaptive management
command and control
Do&#241
ana
Guadalquivir Estuary
path dependence
rigid institutional regimes
Water Framework Directive
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss1/art26/
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