“We need more data”! The politics of scientific information for water governance in the context of hydraulic fracturing

Proposed and actual developments of hydraulic fracturing, as a high-volume water user, have proven contentious in recent years. However, one point of agreement has emerged amongst all actors with regards to water use and hydraulic fracturing: we need more data. This consensus fits with a longstan...

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Main Authors: Michele-Lee Moore, Karena Shaw, Heather Castleden
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Water Alternatives Association 2018-02-01
Series:Water Alternatives
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol11/v11issue1/425-a11-1-8/file
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spelling doaj-7f643228da4c4445a7a1934f0103c9562020-11-25T01:58:33ZengWater Alternatives AssociationWater Alternatives1965-01751965-01752018-02-01111142162“We need more data”! The politics of scientific information for water governance in the context of hydraulic fracturing Michele-Lee Moore0Karena Shaw1Heather Castleden2University of Victoria, Canada; University of Victoria, Canada; Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada Proposed and actual developments of hydraulic fracturing, as a high-volume water user, have proven contentious in recent years. However, one point of agreement has emerged amongst all actors with regards to water use and hydraulic fracturing: we need more data. This consensus fits with a longstanding reification of the role of data in water governance, and yet we argue it hides a politically contested terrain. Based on a literature review, an empirical Delphi study and a workshop with a diverse array of participants from across Canada, we explore the data needs related to water governance and hydraulic fracturing. We then investigate three areas of deficiency that point to a lack of trust and oversight as well as the exclusion of community and Indigenous knowledge. We argue that in an era of neoliberal approaches to water governance, issues of trust, accountability and transparency all link back to a diminished role for data management within existing water governance arrangements. The challenge is that simply collecting more data will not help decision-makers navigate the complexity of water governance. Our findings suggest a growing call by participants for greater engagement by governments in data collection and knowledge management, new funding mechanisms for data collection and rethinking how and what to monitor if including multiple ways of knowing and values.http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol11/v11issue1/425-a11-1-8/fileHydraulic fracturingneoliberalismIndigenous peopleswater governanceaccountabilitydatascience policyTwo-Eyed SeeingCanada
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michele-Lee Moore
Karena Shaw
Heather Castleden
spellingShingle Michele-Lee Moore
Karena Shaw
Heather Castleden
“We need more data”! The politics of scientific information for water governance in the context of hydraulic fracturing
Water Alternatives
Hydraulic fracturing
neoliberalism
Indigenous peoples
water governance
accountability
data
science policy
Two-Eyed Seeing
Canada
author_facet Michele-Lee Moore
Karena Shaw
Heather Castleden
author_sort Michele-Lee Moore
title “We need more data”! The politics of scientific information for water governance in the context of hydraulic fracturing
title_short “We need more data”! The politics of scientific information for water governance in the context of hydraulic fracturing
title_full “We need more data”! The politics of scientific information for water governance in the context of hydraulic fracturing
title_fullStr “We need more data”! The politics of scientific information for water governance in the context of hydraulic fracturing
title_full_unstemmed “We need more data”! The politics of scientific information for water governance in the context of hydraulic fracturing
title_sort “we need more data”! the politics of scientific information for water governance in the context of hydraulic fracturing
publisher Water Alternatives Association
series Water Alternatives
issn 1965-0175
1965-0175
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Proposed and actual developments of hydraulic fracturing, as a high-volume water user, have proven contentious in recent years. However, one point of agreement has emerged amongst all actors with regards to water use and hydraulic fracturing: we need more data. This consensus fits with a longstanding reification of the role of data in water governance, and yet we argue it hides a politically contested terrain. Based on a literature review, an empirical Delphi study and a workshop with a diverse array of participants from across Canada, we explore the data needs related to water governance and hydraulic fracturing. We then investigate three areas of deficiency that point to a lack of trust and oversight as well as the exclusion of community and Indigenous knowledge. We argue that in an era of neoliberal approaches to water governance, issues of trust, accountability and transparency all link back to a diminished role for data management within existing water governance arrangements. The challenge is that simply collecting more data will not help decision-makers navigate the complexity of water governance. Our findings suggest a growing call by participants for greater engagement by governments in data collection and knowledge management, new funding mechanisms for data collection and rethinking how and what to monitor if including multiple ways of knowing and values.
topic Hydraulic fracturing
neoliberalism
Indigenous peoples
water governance
accountability
data
science policy
Two-Eyed Seeing
Canada
url http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol11/v11issue1/425-a11-1-8/file
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