Collaborative Governance in the Rideau Canal: Barriers and Opportunities

The environmental management of watersheds presents a complex governance issue due to their large spatial scales that include overlapping jurisdictions, competing interests in resource use, and lack of coordination among stakeholders. The Rideau Canal, spanning 200 km between the cities of Ottawa an...

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Main Author: Mistry, Isha
Other Authors: Young, Nathan
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/41590
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-25812
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-415902020-12-23T05:27:16Z Collaborative Governance in the Rideau Canal: Barriers and Opportunities Mistry, Isha Young, Nathan Collaborative governance Systems thinking Water governance Stakeholder engagement Socio-ecological systems Adaptive co-management Historic waterways Social learning Power asymmetries The environmental management of watersheds presents a complex governance issue due to their large spatial scales that include overlapping jurisdictions, competing interests in resource use, and lack of coordination among stakeholders. The Rideau Canal, spanning 200 km between the cities of Ottawa and Kingston, is an interesting case study as it is a multi-watershed system over which municipal, provincial and federal governments have authority. However, these governments have been unsuccessful in addressing system-wide issues such as shoreline development, erosion and invasive species that have significantly impacted the ecological integrity of the canal. A shift toward polycentric governance, which are systems of multi-scale governance, in which well-informed publics can contribute to the Rideau Canal’s management is required. This thesis examines how co-governance can be conceptualized for the RC by (1) analyzing convergences in stakeholder perspectives about the environment and governance, and (2) comparing collaborative causal mapping exercises with various stakeholders to current government engagement efforts. A tiered co-governance framework that intentionally links existing small-scale activities to system-wide formal venues of knowledge sharing could democratize environmental governance on the Rideau Canal to improve its management. Beyond its practical contributions, this research also contributes to developing the academic literature on co-governance for multi-watershed waterways that have both constructed and natural aspects. 2020-12-21T20:56:46Z 2020-12-21T20:56:46Z 2020-12-21 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/41590 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-25812 en application/pdf Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Collaborative governance
Systems thinking
Water governance
Stakeholder engagement
Socio-ecological systems
Adaptive co-management
Historic waterways
Social learning
Power asymmetries
spellingShingle Collaborative governance
Systems thinking
Water governance
Stakeholder engagement
Socio-ecological systems
Adaptive co-management
Historic waterways
Social learning
Power asymmetries
Mistry, Isha
Collaborative Governance in the Rideau Canal: Barriers and Opportunities
description The environmental management of watersheds presents a complex governance issue due to their large spatial scales that include overlapping jurisdictions, competing interests in resource use, and lack of coordination among stakeholders. The Rideau Canal, spanning 200 km between the cities of Ottawa and Kingston, is an interesting case study as it is a multi-watershed system over which municipal, provincial and federal governments have authority. However, these governments have been unsuccessful in addressing system-wide issues such as shoreline development, erosion and invasive species that have significantly impacted the ecological integrity of the canal. A shift toward polycentric governance, which are systems of multi-scale governance, in which well-informed publics can contribute to the Rideau Canal’s management is required. This thesis examines how co-governance can be conceptualized for the RC by (1) analyzing convergences in stakeholder perspectives about the environment and governance, and (2) comparing collaborative causal mapping exercises with various stakeholders to current government engagement efforts. A tiered co-governance framework that intentionally links existing small-scale activities to system-wide formal venues of knowledge sharing could democratize environmental governance on the Rideau Canal to improve its management. Beyond its practical contributions, this research also contributes to developing the academic literature on co-governance for multi-watershed waterways that have both constructed and natural aspects.
author2 Young, Nathan
author_facet Young, Nathan
Mistry, Isha
author Mistry, Isha
author_sort Mistry, Isha
title Collaborative Governance in the Rideau Canal: Barriers and Opportunities
title_short Collaborative Governance in the Rideau Canal: Barriers and Opportunities
title_full Collaborative Governance in the Rideau Canal: Barriers and Opportunities
title_fullStr Collaborative Governance in the Rideau Canal: Barriers and Opportunities
title_full_unstemmed Collaborative Governance in the Rideau Canal: Barriers and Opportunities
title_sort collaborative governance in the rideau canal: barriers and opportunities
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/41590
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-25812
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