Friday, June 6, 2014

Watersheds as Sites of Conflict

The conflict being considered here is not necessarily a violent one such as those some fear may occur between upstream and downstream nations in an increasingly water-stressed world; something that a good deal of research has found to be counter to the facts (e.g. Wolf, 1998, 2007). Rather it takes the shape of competing interests wrestling for access to the resource, with legislation and associated agencies and institutions as the primary sites of contestation.

Over the last few decades Integrated Water Resources Management has all but become a convention in the water management world, with watersheds held up as an appropriate unit for decision making. The argument goes that these quasi-closed hydrological units contain within their boundaries both the resource itself, and the various stressors on the resource, allowing for clearer causality and management of cause and effect. However this presents only a partial picture.

To expand the scope it can be helpful to reconceptualise the management of water resources as the management of how our activities draw on and affect these resources. In effect, we are not managing water or nature but we are managing ourselves, and this brings us quickly up against questions like: what specifically is it about how we are behaving that needs to be managed; why are we doing these things rather than something else; and most interestingly, who gets to decide what we do?

In short, there exists a range of possible ways we might use water resources, but “we” are not a homogeneous bunch and decisions made will benefit us differentially. There will be winners and losers, and so we individuals use their resources to compete in order to privilege their interests.

This challenges another conventional wisdom; that watersheds give rise to a sense of place and that watershed residents will come together as a community in defence of their shared interest; of their place. This may or may not be true in the event that some external entity was threatening to exploit the resources of the watershed. However even in this “us against them” scenario there are likely to be winners and losers at the watershed level, undercutting any hypothetical solidarity. Indeed communities can be sites of conflict as well as collaboration (Lane et al., 2004), where different actors may have dramatically different cultural frames and imperatives.

Turning away from the theoretical toward a practical example, source water protection in Ontario, as a social process, is influenced by ecological, social, economic, institutional and political contexts such that, “different types of knowledge and experience, diverse values and expectations, and divergent social perspectives, are continuously confronted, (re)aligned and contested ... among public, private and civil society actors and organisations, with their associated political, ethical and socio-economic imperatives.” (Ferreyra & Beard, 2007).

Agricultural interests are particularly sensitive to the authority of legislation to protect source water. Surveys of farmers have shown that they oppose regulatory control by government over their land (Filson et al, 2009, Lamba et al, 2009). By extension farmers see source water protection efforts as local arenas for regulation rather than venues for collaborative multi-stakeholder dialogue (Ferreyra et al, 2008).

Civil society actors and other proponents of source water protection that are primarily interested in ecological and public health see the watershed as the appropriate scale for environmental governance. However farmers’ core values are those of economic wellbeing and self-determination, leading them to see the farm and county as the appropriate scale for environmental governance (Ferreyra et al, 2008). Tensions between different groups, grounded in different core values and perspectives, and amplified by varying levels of resources and other capabilities, can be expected to affect decisions made and the institutions built up around source water protection.

On the one hand this should result in a source water protection regime that is in some way balanced with other interests and ideas of how the resource ought to be managed. There may however be equity issues where some actors are better able to represent and advance their interests; where minority interests are marginalised in a politicised environment; or where some interests have little or no voice at all, for instance, future generations or non-human residents of the watershed. This may be overemphasising the influence of the political economy on water resources management, but it does so only to make the point that it can not be ignored.

References

  1. Filson, G. C., Sethuratnam, S., Adekunle, B., & Lamba, P. (2009). Beneficial management practice adoption in five southern Ontario watersheds. Journal of Sustainable Agriculture, 33(2), 229-252.
  2. Ferreyra, C., & Beard, P. (2007). Participatory evaluation of collaborative and integrated water management: Insights from the field. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 50(2), 271-296.
  3. Ferreyra, C., de Loe, R. C., & Kreutzwiser, R. D. (2008). Imagined communities, contested watersheds: challenges to integrated water resources management in agricultural areas. Journal of rural studies, 24(3), 304-321.
  4. Lamba, P., Filson, G., & Adekunle, B. (2009). Factors affecting the adoption of best management practices in southern Ontario. The Environmentalist, 29(1), 64-77.
  5. Lane, M. B., McDonald, G. T., & Morrison, T. H. (2004). Decentralisation and environmental management in Australia: a comment on the prescriptions of the Wentworth Group. Australian Geographical Studies, 42(1), 103-115.
  6. Wolf, A. T. (1998). Conflict and cooperation along international waterways. water policy, 1(2), 251-265.
  7. Wolf, A. T. (2007). Shared waters: Conflict and cooperation. Annu. Rev. Environ. Resour., 32, 241-269.


Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Issues of Fit (an installment)

Sustainable development requires that we better understand how our economic activities are interwoven with the ecological goods and services that are either factors of production directly, or are implicated within their supply chain. However to limit the analysis to economic and environmental factors, and not fully embrace the social dimensions of the SD challenge, is to overlook instrumental, institutional and political dimensions that may make or break the potential for progress. From a water management and ecosystem service perspective many fundamentally important social factors are of a geographical nature, and this requires that issues of fit be considered.

One take on fit begins with the notion of a dislocation of ecosystem service supply from the accruing of benefits. Similarly there are temporal dimensions and associated incongruities between the human and ecological dimensions of integrated socio-ecological systems. These factors have important implications that present serious challenges for our policy systems.

Better linkages between science and policy is agreed upon as essential to realising more sustainable development. However natural scientists are more typically focused on the factors of ecosystem service supply. Social scientists on the other hand tend to be more interested in the benefits. Where supply and benefit may be separated by large distances in both time and space, including municipal (or even state/province) jurisdictional divides, managing these discontinuities is essential to moving forward, but it falls in the middle, not in either camp, and is often overlooked.

Politically it is important that users understand their dependence on ecosystem services, but moreover that those users and their representatives understand that the source of the associated benefits may lie beyond their jurisdictional reach. Similarly their decision making may have externalities in jurisdictions elsewhere.  Accordingly adaptive policies that work across scales and jurisdictions are therefore necessary, but very new and often untested ground for public administration.

Moreover, the notion that a watershed may be a jurisdiction in its own right, with citizens who have rights and obligations to one another that transcend political boundaries, but who also may be at odds with one another in terms of values and goals, is still very much a theoretical construct. This condition presents a host of institutional challenges, both formal and informal, which, taken together, speak to perhaps one of the most daunting meta-challenges of sustainable development: that of values, culture and cultural lock-in.


These general remarks are intended as an informal introduction to some of the issues at play as concerns fit and the lack of fit. Future installments on this issue are expected to discuss topics in more detail, including, nested and cross-scale institutions, as well as institutional effectiveness; socio-ecological resilience and (dynamic, evolving) complex ecological-economic systems; and the effects of watershed political economy on institutional development and implementation. 

Friday, November 22, 2013

On Ecosystem Services

Ecosystem services, they've been around for a while. The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment has put ecosystem services on the radar of policy makers, and The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB ) is working hard to get natural capital accounting mainstreamed into national accounts. World Resources Institute has done some great work developing reports and methodologies that illustrate the relevance of ecosystem services for different sectors while giving actors in the public, private and non-profit sectors the tools to incorporate ecosystem services in their decision making and planning processes.

My research starts with these notions that the economy and the environment are inextricably linked. The broader environmental consequences of economic activities are often held up as a challenge to modernity. Looking around it is reasonable to wonder whether our current societal arrangements and orientation are somehow internally flawed and destined for extinction? A large and important question. However I am stepping into this problematic and accepting certain things as more or less constant in the nearer time frame. For me it is the dependency of economic activities on the environment that is of interest, and I have taken ecosystem services as my unit of analysis for examining these relationships.

Providing factors of production, transport of goods and receiving waste streams, the environment provides a range of essential and often non-substitutable goods and services to the economy. Some of these goods have market values while others are less easily incorporated within traditional economic analysis. There exists a substantial literature around the valuation of ecosystem services, with the primary aim of better characterising the joint environmental-economic system. Resilience, and in particular social-ecological resilience, is of increasing interest to scholars in this area.

My thesis work is three-fold: 1) to illustrate the importance of taking a step back and adopting the underlying ecological system as the basis for interpreting ecosystem services in the context of an environment-economy complex; 2) to argue the importance of cultural dimensions to the valuation of ecosystem services, both from a risk mitigation perspective, and in terms of intergenerational equity as a precondition for sustainable development; and, 3) to examine the political economy of watersheds and document how competition between various actors for access to the ecosystem services they need can affect the institutionalisation and implementation of water resources policy.

The goal is to publish these three research initiatives as individual papers – all success in that regard will be reported here – as well as to weave them together into a larger narrative. That second objective will be explored more in subsequent communications through this blog.



References

Millennium Ecosystem Assessment - http://www.unep.org/maweb/en/index.aspx


World Resources Institute - http://www.wri.org/
-        Weaving Ecosystem Services into Impact Assessment: http://www.wri.org/publication/weaving-ecosystem-services-into-impact-assessment
-        The Corporate Ecosystem Services Review: http://www.wri.org/publication/corporate-ecosystem-services-review

Arise old blog, arise !

Over the course of the last couple of years I have stepped back from this blog, largely because I have been back in learning mode, ploughing through coursework, comps, papers and proposals as part of ongoing work toward a PhD in Public Policy. What started out as a simple plan – get into some dedicated research space to work toward preconceived and specific goals, by way of carving out a professional niche – has turned into a great intellectual adventure. The original idea was to bring theory to years of practical experience in science-based water policy (which in turn was based on a technical foundation in water resources engineering). However the theory has opened up on all sides giving occasional glimpses of a sort of “superview”, as one colleague put it, of the public policy landscape; history, methods, disciplinary perspectives, processes, concepts and vocabularies, ideologies, institutions, actors, etc.


Now as the ideas pile up and connections continue to take shape it is time to write again. Indeed there has been a lot of writing along the way but now it’s time to pull out shorter pieces and take on documenting various aspects of the larger whole. At this point the objective will be to keep things relatively tight, and limited to key references, but that may change. I hope to provide a sense of how one piece fits within the larger picture, but the topic areas will be diverse, spanning from water and watershed governance to political philosophy to economic theory, through crosscutting institutional dimensions, and back again (and more), so tracing linkages between the many different dimensions will be neither easy nor complete, but hopefully it will be interesting.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Of Land and Spirit

Just back from two and a half weeks of holiday in Nova Scotia, it was time to make the rounds and check in on our three gardens. The potatoes were looking rough, perhaps blight, perhaps something else. Otherwise things were in pretty good shape – beans, beets, tomatoes, carrots, onions and even five giant pumpkins, yet to demonstrate their full character. But something else was underway in those gardens that really came along during the weeks away.

There exists a good deal of concern around how a projected population of nine billion people might coexist on this planet. The tensions between food, fibre and fuel are placing a lot of stress on the soils that sustain us. These stresses are compounded by modern material aspirations and the global attraction toward what some might call the myth of the American Dream. As some people find their place on the sliding scale between standard of living and quality of life, many still struggle to meet basic needs. Within the resulting complex of human condition, and pressing present concerns, how can we find what is needed to follow David Montgomery’s advice and stop treating soil like dirt[1]?

Back in the garden a conversation got me thinking about why I like to grow my own food. With about 2000 square feet in production the quantity is measurable, but is still only a portion of annual food requirements. Dairy, some meat and processed foods, as well as flour and processed grain make up the balance. Beyond that there are all the other requirements of life such as shelter, transportation and fun, and cash is used to meet these ends. Further, in this economy of specialisation the cash equivalent of our total food production is disproportionate by orders of magnitude when compared to the time invested.

So clearly these agrarian pursuits do not a livelihood make, but there remains a deep satisfaction resulting from these activities. In the book, The Other Side of Eden, Hugh Brody explores the characteristics of, and interface between, agricultural and hunter gatherer societies[2]. Born of a farmer society but having lived a large part of his life embedded within hunter gatherer societies, Brody provides an invaluable bridge between the two worlds and allows the farmer a new optic through which to understand himself. While I have not earned the right to be called a farmer per se, I am of a farmer society and think, feel, behave and understand accordingly. Having said all that, what does growing (some) food actually mean? In part it may be a personal pilgrimage and atonement for the errors of Eden, pushing back the wild forces to create a place for existence – in my case a token at best.

Upon further reflection I think it is more the pace of gardening that I enjoy. Hard work and good weather yields food, one of our most fundamental requirements. Because I am Canadian it would take less time to earn the money to buy this food than it does to grow it. However that is beside the point. The experiences of hard work, uncertainty of outcome, joy of harvest and loss of crops, provide a foothold for understanding how so many others on this planet exist. It puts the idea of nine billion people in a new and valuable perspective. All the issues and complexities of nations, states, sectors, interests and institutions fade away and the human dimension comes forward. Past and future are focussed through the lens of the food that sustains. This leads to a welling up of stewardship from within. Looking up from the garden at this moment is to see the world differently. The air that fills my lungs tastes sweet, the sounds of birds and the feeling of raindrops – the sensory aspects of existence – seem more present and tangible, almost profound.

Leaving the garden and returning to work, the complexity of it all comes rushing back. Our societies are intricate, our achievements are many, and the variety of culture, state and individual are impressive. Food and the farming of food underlie much of this progress, yet ironically the future of food and farming lays at the mercy of its own legacy, as does the future of many of the people who are closest to it.



[1] Our Good Earth, National Geographic Magazine, September 2008, http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/09/soil/mann-text

[2] One online point of information on The Other Side of Eden: http://arcticcircle.uconn.edu/RelatedInformation/brody.htm

Friday, April 30, 2010

A Programme Framework

The following outlines some conceptual thinking for a programme looking for solutions within the linkages between ecosystem services, governance and sustainable development. Use if useful, comments are most welcome.


Vision & Mission

Sustainable societies are ones where the voice and rights of every individual are assured.

Sustainable development will deliver on this vision for this and future generations.



Objectives

- Balance power

- Promote peace on a platform of assured rights

- Redefine growth

- Move beyond incremental change toward transformative change

- Establish the validity of qualitative measurements

- Encourage resource productivity

- Encourage new models of decision making

- Move past the limitations of Cost-Benefit Analysis


Principles

- Precautionary Approach and Polluter Pays

- Externalities must be identified and internalised

- Sustainability of society must serve to enhance the voice and rights of it’s members

- Quantitative measurement enforces a rigidity of direction and entrenches short-term horizons

- Growth is in transition (http://www.growthintransition.eu/)

- Sustainability is currently about transition, about reversing unsustainable trends

- Transformative change happens when system becomes subordinate to sustainable development agenda


Foresight & Transition Management

- Transitions are structural societal changes resulting from interacting cultural, economic, technological, behavioural, ecological or institutional developments.

- Transitions provide a key for achieving a more sustainable and innovative society. http://www.drift.eur.nl/about/about/

- Need to avoid tipping points & irreversible environmental and social impacts


Human Rights Perspective

- John Ruggie – protect, respect, remedy framework (www.srsgconsultation.org/)
  • State duty to protect
  • Corporate responsibility to respect
  • Access by victims to effective remedy
- Governance of ecosystem services is often skewed in favour of the most salient and influential parties, often private sector interests, at the expense of individual human rights, especially those of marginalised people.


Climate Change Perspective

- Rising stress on water and productive land

- Food security and widening disparity

- Estimated population growth of 2.3 billion additional people by 2050

- Policy talks on mitigation are vitally linked to the right to development


Digital Democracy & the MDGs

- The forces of globalism are increasingly overwhelming the rights of ordinary citizens and the public commons

- Mobile phones enable information flow supporting a range of endpoints

- Improved Governance helps address
  • Uncertainties
  • Complexities
- Inclusion of poor and marginalised people


Water Management in Watersheds

- Unites cities and their associated regions

- Connects political and natural jurisdictions

- Natural quasi-closed system enables carrying capacity calculations
  • Ecosystem services
  • Population projections
  • Employment
  • Food etc consumption needs
  • Management of uncertainties

Urban Sustainability

- Cities are fundamentally unsustainable and must be viewed in a regional context

- Current urban forms do not necessarily offer flexibility in the face of looming uncertainties such as climate change and economic downturns

- The long-term costs of servicing sprawl should be brought into decision making


Energy Perspective

- The sun provides essentially unlimited amounts of accessible energy

- The cost of energy embedded in all aspects of our economy fuels poverty and creates division

- Ongoing human existence requires a new, less wasteful but still vibrant economy

Thursday, April 8, 2010

An Introduction

Or perhaps more accurately, a beginning.

There was a comment on CBC this morning regarding the increasing dominance of social media as a source of information. Referring back to Marshall McLuhan, the announcer observed that if the medium is the message, then in the age of social media the message is us. Very interesting and central to the purpose of this blog.

This is a community space where we comment and also publish material, and it will evolve with the discussion, expanding and reaching out to related dialogues.

Broadly speaking the content will be in the domain of water management, governance and sustainable development. We will seek to identify and understand the linkages between them, and interconnectivity with the wider matters of human concern.

Suggestions for thematic posts are welcomed, as subsequent comments will become a meaningful, issue-focussed dialogue.

Participation in informal dialogue advances the state of the debate, creating new information in an off the record environment, while at the same time creating the channels that make these ideas available to decision making.

A few preliminary markers:

• In a multistakeholder discussion social and natural sciences are primary stakeholders – accordingly references should be listed (blog posting doesn’t seem to provide for footnoting but for now they can be listed at the bottom).

• Canadian and international water managers have a lot to learn from one another.

• Markets work, but only when the playing field is levelled from all sides and not unduly affected by special interests.

• Finally, on process, we all are wading through information. Brevity is wonderful but not always possible. At a minimum, an abstract or summary introduction will improve uptake of more involved ideas.


These thoughts, like everything presented here, are on the table for dissection and discussion.