Can BC's 40-year-old water quality objectives policy solve today's challenges for managing cumulative effects?

Water quality is a critical component of aquatic ecosystems, and impairments caused by the cumulative effects of human activities can threaten water security, ecosystem health and biodiversity, and ecosystem services that support human livelihoods, health, and well-being. Protecting water quality an...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Russo, Geneen
Other Authors: Moore, Michele-Lee
Format: Others
Language:English
en
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/9266
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-92662018-04-27T17:09:37Z Can BC's 40-year-old water quality objectives policy solve today's challenges for managing cumulative effects? Russo, Geneen Moore, Michele-Lee water quality cumulative effects strategic environmental assessment water governance Water quality is a critical component of aquatic ecosystems, and impairments caused by the cumulative effects of human activities can threaten water security, ecosystem health and biodiversity, and ecosystem services that support human livelihoods, health, and well-being. Protecting water quality and managing the human activities that can contribute to cumulative effects remains the most important, though poorly understood and under-researched problem facing sustainable water quality management in Canada (Johns & Sproule-Jones, Schindler & Donahue, 2006) and around the world (Patterson, Smith, & Bellamy, 2013; UN-Water, 2011). For decades, federal and provincial governments in Canada have introduced, and experimented with, policy tools that are intended to assess and manage cumulative effects, yet, point source management approaches remain by far, the preferred policy tool. The results of this study indicate that part of the reason why cumulative effects assessment and management approaches have not evolved is because policy tools intended to address questions about environmental governance are being implemented as environmental management tools. Questions of environmental governance should be inclusive and focused on how the environment is used now and in the future for societal benefits. Conversely, management questions are narrower in scope and serve to operationalize these goals. This research highlights the challenge with identifying and developing critical relationships between the array of agencies and institutions responsible for governing and managing water quality, as well as the need to devise strategies to ensure these relationships are maintained over time if progress towards managing cumulative effects to water quality can be achieved. Graduate 2018-04-26T20:12:09Z 2018-04-26T20:12:09Z 2018 2018-04-26 Thesis https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/9266 English en Available to the World Wide Web application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic water quality
cumulative effects
strategic environmental assessment
water governance
spellingShingle water quality
cumulative effects
strategic environmental assessment
water governance
Russo, Geneen
Can BC's 40-year-old water quality objectives policy solve today's challenges for managing cumulative effects?
description Water quality is a critical component of aquatic ecosystems, and impairments caused by the cumulative effects of human activities can threaten water security, ecosystem health and biodiversity, and ecosystem services that support human livelihoods, health, and well-being. Protecting water quality and managing the human activities that can contribute to cumulative effects remains the most important, though poorly understood and under-researched problem facing sustainable water quality management in Canada (Johns & Sproule-Jones, Schindler & Donahue, 2006) and around the world (Patterson, Smith, & Bellamy, 2013; UN-Water, 2011). For decades, federal and provincial governments in Canada have introduced, and experimented with, policy tools that are intended to assess and manage cumulative effects, yet, point source management approaches remain by far, the preferred policy tool. The results of this study indicate that part of the reason why cumulative effects assessment and management approaches have not evolved is because policy tools intended to address questions about environmental governance are being implemented as environmental management tools. Questions of environmental governance should be inclusive and focused on how the environment is used now and in the future for societal benefits. Conversely, management questions are narrower in scope and serve to operationalize these goals. This research highlights the challenge with identifying and developing critical relationships between the array of agencies and institutions responsible for governing and managing water quality, as well as the need to devise strategies to ensure these relationships are maintained over time if progress towards managing cumulative effects to water quality can be achieved. === Graduate
author2 Moore, Michele-Lee
author_facet Moore, Michele-Lee
Russo, Geneen
author Russo, Geneen
author_sort Russo, Geneen
title Can BC's 40-year-old water quality objectives policy solve today's challenges for managing cumulative effects?
title_short Can BC's 40-year-old water quality objectives policy solve today's challenges for managing cumulative effects?
title_full Can BC's 40-year-old water quality objectives policy solve today's challenges for managing cumulative effects?
title_fullStr Can BC's 40-year-old water quality objectives policy solve today's challenges for managing cumulative effects?
title_full_unstemmed Can BC's 40-year-old water quality objectives policy solve today's challenges for managing cumulative effects?
title_sort can bc's 40-year-old water quality objectives policy solve today's challenges for managing cumulative effects?
publishDate 2018
url https://dspace.library.uvic.ca//handle/1828/9266
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