Power and Conflict in Adaptive Management: Analyzing the Discourse of Riparian Management on Public Lands
Adaptive collaborative management emphasizes stakeholder engagement as a crucial component of resilient social-ecological systems. Collaboration among diverse stakeholders is expected to enhance learning, build social legitimacy for decision making, and establish relationships that support learning...
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Resilience Alliance
2012-03-01
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doaj-8abab58e29624be787c8b9d37dc6e2642020-11-24T23:02:08ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872012-03-011711910.5751/ES-04636-1701194636Power and Conflict in Adaptive Management: Analyzing the Discourse of Riparian Management on Public LandsJennifer S. Arnold0Mirka Koro-Ljungberg1Wendy-Lin Bartels2School of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of FloridaSchool of Human Development and Organizational Studies, University of FloridaFlorida Climate Institute, University of FloridaAdaptive collaborative management emphasizes stakeholder engagement as a crucial component of resilient social-ecological systems. Collaboration among diverse stakeholders is expected to enhance learning, build social legitimacy for decision making, and establish relationships that support learning and adaptation in the long term. However, simply bringing together diverse stakeholders does not guarantee productive engagement. Using critical discourse analysis, we examined how diverse stakeholders negotiated knowledge and power in a workshop designed to inform adaptive management of riparian livestock grazing on a National Forest in the southwestern USA. Publicly recognized as a successful component of a larger collaborative effort, we found that the workshop effectively brought together diverse participants, yet still restricted dialogue in important ways. Notably, workshop facilitators took on the additional roles of riparian experts and instructors. As they guided workshop participants toward a consensus view of riparian conditions and management recommendations, they used their status as riparian experts to emphasize commonalities with stakeholders supportive of riparian grazing and accentuate differences with stakeholders skeptical of riparian grazing, including some Forest Service staff with power to influence management decisions. Ultimately, the management plan published one year later did not fully adopt the consensus view from the workshop, but rather included and acknowledged a broader diversity of stakeholder perspectives. Our findings suggest that leaders and facilitators of adaptive collaborative management can more effectively manage for productive stakeholder engagement and, thus, social-ecological resilience if they are more tentative in their convictions, more critical of the role of expert knowledge, and more attentive to the knowledge, interests, and power of diverse stakeholders.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss1/art19/collaborationconflictcritical discourse analysisdialoguefacilitationlivestock grazingpublic participationriparian managementsocial learningstakeholder engagement |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jennifer S. Arnold Mirka Koro-Ljungberg Wendy-Lin Bartels |
spellingShingle |
Jennifer S. Arnold Mirka Koro-Ljungberg Wendy-Lin Bartels Power and Conflict in Adaptive Management: Analyzing the Discourse of Riparian Management on Public Lands Ecology and Society collaboration conflict critical discourse analysis dialogue facilitation livestock grazing public participation riparian management social learning stakeholder engagement |
author_facet |
Jennifer S. Arnold Mirka Koro-Ljungberg Wendy-Lin Bartels |
author_sort |
Jennifer S. Arnold |
title |
Power and Conflict in Adaptive Management: Analyzing the Discourse of Riparian Management on Public Lands |
title_short |
Power and Conflict in Adaptive Management: Analyzing the Discourse of Riparian Management on Public Lands |
title_full |
Power and Conflict in Adaptive Management: Analyzing the Discourse of Riparian Management on Public Lands |
title_fullStr |
Power and Conflict in Adaptive Management: Analyzing the Discourse of Riparian Management on Public Lands |
title_full_unstemmed |
Power and Conflict in Adaptive Management: Analyzing the Discourse of Riparian Management on Public Lands |
title_sort |
power and conflict in adaptive management: analyzing the discourse of riparian management on public lands |
publisher |
Resilience Alliance |
series |
Ecology and Society |
issn |
1708-3087 |
publishDate |
2012-03-01 |
description |
Adaptive collaborative management emphasizes stakeholder engagement as a crucial component of resilient social-ecological systems. Collaboration among diverse stakeholders is expected to enhance learning, build social legitimacy for decision making, and establish relationships that support learning and adaptation in the long term. However, simply bringing together diverse stakeholders does not guarantee productive engagement. Using critical discourse analysis, we examined how diverse stakeholders negotiated knowledge and power in a workshop designed to inform adaptive management of riparian livestock grazing on a National Forest in the southwestern USA. Publicly recognized as a successful component of a larger collaborative effort, we found that the workshop effectively brought together diverse participants, yet still restricted dialogue in important ways. Notably, workshop facilitators took on the additional roles of riparian experts and instructors. As they guided workshop participants toward a consensus view of riparian conditions and management recommendations, they used their status as riparian experts to emphasize commonalities with stakeholders supportive of riparian grazing and accentuate differences with stakeholders skeptical of riparian grazing, including some Forest Service staff with power to influence management decisions. Ultimately, the management plan published one year later did not fully adopt the consensus view from the workshop, but rather included and acknowledged a broader diversity of stakeholder perspectives. Our findings suggest that leaders and facilitators of adaptive collaborative management can more effectively manage for productive stakeholder engagement and, thus, social-ecological resilience if they are more tentative in their convictions, more critical of the role of expert knowledge, and more attentive to the knowledge, interests, and power of diverse stakeholders. |
topic |
collaboration conflict critical discourse analysis dialogue facilitation livestock grazing public participation riparian management social learning stakeholder engagement |
url |
http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss1/art19/ |
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