Collaborative environmental governance
Collaborative environmental governance is an approach to environmental governance which seeks to account for scale mismatch which may occur within social-ecological systems. It recognizes that interconnected human and biological systems exist on multiple geographic and temporal scales and thus CEG seeks to build collaboration among actors across multiple scales and jurisdictions.
Benefits of CEG
Collaboration is a means to:- enhance the generation of new knowledge through social learning,
- better integrate important insights from different knowledge systems,
- diffuse knowledge and best practices among a multitude of actors.
New Knowledge Generation through Social Learning
The uncertainty involved in ecosystem management and environmental governance requires that these systems be adaptable to new knowledge. Collaboration may facilitate this type of adaptivity through a process of social learning, by which new understandings are learned through interaction among individuals, and that change in those individuals understanding goes beyond that individual to change a communities understanding.Integration of Different Knowledge Systems
By multiple actors collaborating across multiple knowledge systems, indigenous and traditional knowledge, environmental governance can benefit from the many communities that are not among the scientific community. Traditional knowledge may play a particularly important role in framing and scoping environmental issues, but also contribute to every aspect of the decision-making process.There may also emerge a secondary benefit of higher perceptions fairness among actors which hold varied understandings of their environment. Increased perception of fairness regarding the decision-making process may lead to increased trust among actors, as well as reinforce collaboration itself.
Diffusion of Knowledge
Actors within a decision-making process and those who are affected by those processes do not always accept new knowledge or understanding easily. By developing networks of collaboration among various actors, new knowledge and understanding may be more readily diffused between disparate community networks.Challenges
Collaboration among stakeholders takes time and resources. Understanding when collaboration is an effective means of addressing problems within the decision making process is important in order to not over apply CEG. There are various issues within social-ecological systems which may hinder the effectiveness of CEG including:- the immediate nature of some environmental issues,
- asymmetric power dynamics,
- increased conflict due to collaboration.