The institutional design, politics, and effects of a bioregional approach : Observations and lessons from 11 case studies of river basin organizations

One of the prescriptions for adaptive comanagement of social-ecological systems is to follow a bioregional approach. In water resources management, experience has been gained with a bioregional approach by the foundation of river basin organizations (RBOs). Here, we summarize the results of a research project involving 27 colleagues who have undertaken an analysis of the global discussion on RBOs and the foundation of RBOs in Canada, USA, Great Britain, Germany, Portugal, South Africa, Ukraine, Afghanistan, Mongolia, Thailand, and Australia. Drawing on Ostrom’s institutional analysis and development framework, we first present a fine-grained analysis of the institutional architecture of these RBOs, which enables us to distinguish between autonomous, coordinating, partnership, and agency type RBOs. Second, we unravel the main controversies over this architecture by focusing on the key actors involved in either promoting or hindering RBO formation, globally and at the national level. Third, we summarize how the performance of RBOs can be evaluated in terms of coordination, accountability, legitimacy, and environmental effectiveness. Finally, we discuss the relationship between institutional design and performance. The main findings are: (1) the foundation of RBOs is not a neutral process but rather a highly political one, (2) the foundation of RBOs creates complex accountability relationships, and (3) institutional interplay, the capacity to generate financial resources, and a minimum degree of institutional stability are crucial to the successes of RBOs in realizing coordination and environmental effectiveness.

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Main Authors: Meijerink, Sander, Huitema, Dave
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Accountability, Bioregional approach, Institutional analysis, Institutional interplay, River basin organizations,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/the-institutional-design-politics-and-effects-of-a-bioregional-ap
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-6093882024-03-11 Meijerink, Sander Huitema, Dave Article/Letter to editor Ecology and Society 22 (2017) 2 ISSN: 1708-3087 The institutional design, politics, and effects of a bioregional approach : Observations and lessons from 11 case studies of river basin organizations 2017 One of the prescriptions for adaptive comanagement of social-ecological systems is to follow a bioregional approach. In water resources management, experience has been gained with a bioregional approach by the foundation of river basin organizations (RBOs). Here, we summarize the results of a research project involving 27 colleagues who have undertaken an analysis of the global discussion on RBOs and the foundation of RBOs in Canada, USA, Great Britain, Germany, Portugal, South Africa, Ukraine, Afghanistan, Mongolia, Thailand, and Australia. Drawing on Ostrom’s institutional analysis and development framework, we first present a fine-grained analysis of the institutional architecture of these RBOs, which enables us to distinguish between autonomous, coordinating, partnership, and agency type RBOs. Second, we unravel the main controversies over this architecture by focusing on the key actors involved in either promoting or hindering RBO formation, globally and at the national level. Third, we summarize how the performance of RBOs can be evaluated in terms of coordination, accountability, legitimacy, and environmental effectiveness. Finally, we discuss the relationship between institutional design and performance. The main findings are: (1) the foundation of RBOs is not a neutral process but rather a highly political one, (2) the foundation of RBOs creates complex accountability relationships, and (3) institutional interplay, the capacity to generate financial resources, and a minimum degree of institutional stability are crucial to the successes of RBOs in realizing coordination and environmental effectiveness. en text/html https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/the-institutional-design-politics-and-effects-of-a-bioregional-ap 10.5751/ES-09388-220241 https://edepot.wur.nl/586137 Accountability Bioregional approach Institutional analysis Institutional interplay River basin organizations https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/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 Accountability
Bioregional approach
Institutional analysis
Institutional interplay
River basin organizations
Accountability
Bioregional approach
Institutional analysis
Institutional interplay
River basin organizations
spellingShingle Accountability
Bioregional approach
Institutional analysis
Institutional interplay
River basin organizations
Accountability
Bioregional approach
Institutional analysis
Institutional interplay
River basin organizations
Meijerink, Sander
Huitema, Dave
The institutional design, politics, and effects of a bioregional approach : Observations and lessons from 11 case studies of river basin organizations
description One of the prescriptions for adaptive comanagement of social-ecological systems is to follow a bioregional approach. In water resources management, experience has been gained with a bioregional approach by the foundation of river basin organizations (RBOs). Here, we summarize the results of a research project involving 27 colleagues who have undertaken an analysis of the global discussion on RBOs and the foundation of RBOs in Canada, USA, Great Britain, Germany, Portugal, South Africa, Ukraine, Afghanistan, Mongolia, Thailand, and Australia. Drawing on Ostrom’s institutional analysis and development framework, we first present a fine-grained analysis of the institutional architecture of these RBOs, which enables us to distinguish between autonomous, coordinating, partnership, and agency type RBOs. Second, we unravel the main controversies over this architecture by focusing on the key actors involved in either promoting or hindering RBO formation, globally and at the national level. Third, we summarize how the performance of RBOs can be evaluated in terms of coordination, accountability, legitimacy, and environmental effectiveness. Finally, we discuss the relationship between institutional design and performance. The main findings are: (1) the foundation of RBOs is not a neutral process but rather a highly political one, (2) the foundation of RBOs creates complex accountability relationships, and (3) institutional interplay, the capacity to generate financial resources, and a minimum degree of institutional stability are crucial to the successes of RBOs in realizing coordination and environmental effectiveness.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Accountability
Bioregional approach
Institutional analysis
Institutional interplay
River basin organizations
author Meijerink, Sander
Huitema, Dave
author_facet Meijerink, Sander
Huitema, Dave
author_sort Meijerink, Sander
title The institutional design, politics, and effects of a bioregional approach : Observations and lessons from 11 case studies of river basin organizations
title_short The institutional design, politics, and effects of a bioregional approach : Observations and lessons from 11 case studies of river basin organizations
title_full The institutional design, politics, and effects of a bioregional approach : Observations and lessons from 11 case studies of river basin organizations
title_fullStr The institutional design, politics, and effects of a bioregional approach : Observations and lessons from 11 case studies of river basin organizations
title_full_unstemmed The institutional design, politics, and effects of a bioregional approach : Observations and lessons from 11 case studies of river basin organizations
title_sort institutional design, politics, and effects of a bioregional approach : observations and lessons from 11 case studies of river basin organizations
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/the-institutional-design-politics-and-effects-of-a-bioregional-ap
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