Nebraska's natural resource district system: Collaborative approaches to adaptive groundwater quality governance

Nonpoint source pollution of groundwater by nitrates from agricultural activity is a persistent problem for which developing effective policy approaches has proven difficult. There is little empirical information on forms of governance or regime attributes that effectively and sustainably address agricultural nonpoint source pollution of groundwater. Nebraska's Natural Resource District (NRD) system is a rare example of a groundwater governance regime that is putting programmes in place that are likely to generate sustainable groundwater quality outcomes. We focus on three groundwater nitrate management programmes in the state that collectively represent the broader NRD system. The research shows that four elements of Nebraska's groundwater governance regime are fundamental to its success in addressing groundwater nitrates: 1) the local nature of governance, which builds trust among stakeholders; 2) the significant authority granted to the local districts by the state, allowing for the development of locally tailored solutions; 3) the collaborative governance approach, which allows potential scale imbalances to be overcome; and 4) the taxing authority granted to NRDs, which enables them to fund locally tailored management solutions. We find that these aspects of the NRD system have created conditions that enable adaptive, collaborative governance that positions the state well to address emerging groundwater quality challenges. We present aspects of the governance regime that are generalisable to other American states as efforts to address nitrate pollution in groundwater increase.

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Main Authors: Sixt, Gregory N., Klerkx, Laurens, Aiken, J.D., Griffin, Timothy S.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Groundwater quality, Local governance, Nebraska, Nested regimes, Nonpoint source pollution, Polycentric governance, USA,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/nebraskas-natural-resource-district-system-collaborative-approach
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5528882024-12-04 Sixt, Gregory N. Klerkx, Laurens Aiken, J.D. Griffin, Timothy S. Article/Letter to editor Water Alternatives 12 (2019) 2 ISSN: 1965-0175 Nebraska's natural resource district system: Collaborative approaches to adaptive groundwater quality governance 2019 Nonpoint source pollution of groundwater by nitrates from agricultural activity is a persistent problem for which developing effective policy approaches has proven difficult. There is little empirical information on forms of governance or regime attributes that effectively and sustainably address agricultural nonpoint source pollution of groundwater. Nebraska's Natural Resource District (NRD) system is a rare example of a groundwater governance regime that is putting programmes in place that are likely to generate sustainable groundwater quality outcomes. We focus on three groundwater nitrate management programmes in the state that collectively represent the broader NRD system. The research shows that four elements of Nebraska's groundwater governance regime are fundamental to its success in addressing groundwater nitrates: 1) the local nature of governance, which builds trust among stakeholders; 2) the significant authority granted to the local districts by the state, allowing for the development of locally tailored solutions; 3) the collaborative governance approach, which allows potential scale imbalances to be overcome; and 4) the taxing authority granted to NRDs, which enables them to fund locally tailored management solutions. We find that these aspects of the NRD system have created conditions that enable adaptive, collaborative governance that positions the state well to address emerging groundwater quality challenges. We present aspects of the governance regime that are generalisable to other American states as efforts to address nitrate pollution in groundwater increase. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/nebraskas-natural-resource-district-system-collaborative-approach https://edepot.wur.nl/498276 Groundwater quality Local governance Nebraska Nested regimes Nonpoint source pollution Polycentric governance USA https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Groundwater quality
Local governance
Nebraska
Nested regimes
Nonpoint source pollution
Polycentric governance
USA
Groundwater quality
Local governance
Nebraska
Nested regimes
Nonpoint source pollution
Polycentric governance
USA
spellingShingle Groundwater quality
Local governance
Nebraska
Nested regimes
Nonpoint source pollution
Polycentric governance
USA
Groundwater quality
Local governance
Nebraska
Nested regimes
Nonpoint source pollution
Polycentric governance
USA
Sixt, Gregory N.
Klerkx, Laurens
Aiken, J.D.
Griffin, Timothy S.
Nebraska's natural resource district system: Collaborative approaches to adaptive groundwater quality governance
description Nonpoint source pollution of groundwater by nitrates from agricultural activity is a persistent problem for which developing effective policy approaches has proven difficult. There is little empirical information on forms of governance or regime attributes that effectively and sustainably address agricultural nonpoint source pollution of groundwater. Nebraska's Natural Resource District (NRD) system is a rare example of a groundwater governance regime that is putting programmes in place that are likely to generate sustainable groundwater quality outcomes. We focus on three groundwater nitrate management programmes in the state that collectively represent the broader NRD system. The research shows that four elements of Nebraska's groundwater governance regime are fundamental to its success in addressing groundwater nitrates: 1) the local nature of governance, which builds trust among stakeholders; 2) the significant authority granted to the local districts by the state, allowing for the development of locally tailored solutions; 3) the collaborative governance approach, which allows potential scale imbalances to be overcome; and 4) the taxing authority granted to NRDs, which enables them to fund locally tailored management solutions. We find that these aspects of the NRD system have created conditions that enable adaptive, collaborative governance that positions the state well to address emerging groundwater quality challenges. We present aspects of the governance regime that are generalisable to other American states as efforts to address nitrate pollution in groundwater increase.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Groundwater quality
Local governance
Nebraska
Nested regimes
Nonpoint source pollution
Polycentric governance
USA
author Sixt, Gregory N.
Klerkx, Laurens
Aiken, J.D.
Griffin, Timothy S.
author_facet Sixt, Gregory N.
Klerkx, Laurens
Aiken, J.D.
Griffin, Timothy S.
author_sort Sixt, Gregory N.
title Nebraska's natural resource district system: Collaborative approaches to adaptive groundwater quality governance
title_short Nebraska's natural resource district system: Collaborative approaches to adaptive groundwater quality governance
title_full Nebraska's natural resource district system: Collaborative approaches to adaptive groundwater quality governance
title_fullStr Nebraska's natural resource district system: Collaborative approaches to adaptive groundwater quality governance
title_full_unstemmed Nebraska's natural resource district system: Collaborative approaches to adaptive groundwater quality governance
title_sort nebraska's natural resource district system: collaborative approaches to adaptive groundwater quality governance
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/nebraskas-natural-resource-district-system-collaborative-approach
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