TY - JOUR
T1 - Dialogic science-policy networks for water security governance in the arid Americas
AU - Lutz-Ley, América N.
AU - Scott, Christopher A.
AU - Wilder, Margaret
AU - Varady, Robert G.
AU - Ocampo-Melgar, Anahi
AU - Lara-Valencia, Francisco
AU - Zuniga-Teran, Adriana A.
AU - Buechler, Stephanie
AU - Díaz-Caravantes, Rolando
AU - Ribeiro Neto, Alfredo
AU - Pineda-Pablos, Nicolás
AU - Martín, Facundo
N1 - Funding Information:
Addressing wicked problems requires a systems' perspective to understand and improve rather than to solve the situation. Conventional, linear policy-making strategies are not well suited to address the complexity and uncertainty of wicked water problems. Solely bottom-up or locally based solutions also may fail to identify key interconnections with larger scale drivers, impacts and stakeholders ( Miller and Erickson, 2006 ; Chaffin et al., 2014 ). In addressing wicked water problems, integrative, network- and dialogue-based approaches are alternatives to conventional modes of governance. The objectives of this article are 1) to advance the concept of dialogic science-policy networks and their application to address wicked water-security problems ( Varady et al., 2020 ; Albrecht et al., 2018 ; Scott et al., 2012 ); and 2) to identify guidelines for action to develop more effective science-policy dialogues. We do this by reviewing several concrete place-based approaches for science-policy interactions aimed at improving water security across the arid Americas. This dialogic approach to water security was initially fostered by a grant from the Collaborative Research Networks 2 (CRN2) program of the Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research (IAI), a western hemisphere treaty organization involving 19 countries’ ministries of science and technology and ministries of foreign affairs, financed by numerous national science foundations and other sponsors.
Funding Information:
The Maipo basin case, grounded in the importance of inclusivity and involvement of a diversity of stakeholders, shows the development of a decision-analysis approach called Robust Decision Making (RDM) to co-construct and assess uncertainties, policy levers, measures, and relationships ( Lempert et al., 2003 ; Lempert and Groves, 2010 ). The Maipo Basin Adaptation Plan (MAPA in Spanish) was an initiative led by the interdisciplinary Centre of Global Change and funded by the International Development Research Centre of Canada. The objective of the project was to improve understanding of vulnerability and adaptation opportunities for the 15,300-km 2 Maipo River basin, the most populated region in Chile with seven million people (about 40 percent of Chile's population). The three-year process started in 2012 and followed an iterative science-policy dialogue within a group named the Scenario-Building Team (SBT).
Funding Information:
The authors are grateful for the support provided by the Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research , Collaborative Research Networks Program (grant no. CRN3056 , which is supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation [NSF] grant GEO-1128040 and NSF grant DEB-101049 ). The work that resulted in this essay was also partly supported by the International Water Security Network, a project funded by Lloyd's Register Foundation, a charitable foundation helping protect life and property by supporting engineering-related education, public engagement and the application of research.
Funding Information:
This network is not supported by IAI, AQUASEC or IWSN. Instead, major impetus for the Colorado Delta network came initially from the “RCN: The Colorado River Delta Research Coordination Network” NSF grant (2005–2012) awarded to K. Flessa at the University of Arizona. 3 3 However, many of the stakeholders and scientists involved have been long-term partners to several of the AQUASEC projects showcased here. This suggests that governance lessons from successful cases in one place can guide efforts in other parts of the arid Americas through dialogic networks capable of banking and transferring social learning through their brokers and bridging members.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2021/6
Y1 - 2021/6
N2 - Addressing wicked problems challenging water security requires participation from multiple stakeholders, often with conflicting visions, complicating the attainment of water-security goals and heightening the need for integrative and effective science-policy interfaces. Sustained multi-stakeholder dialogues within science-policy networks can improve adaptive governance and water system resilience. This paper describes what we define as “dialogic science-policy networks,” or interactions – both in structural and procedural terms – between scientists and policy-makers that are: 1) interdisciplinary, 2) international (here, inter-American), 3) cross-sectoral, 4) open, 5) continual and iterative in the long-term, and 6) flexible. By fostering these types of interactions, dialogic networks achieve what we call the 4-I criteria for effective science-policy dialogues: inclusivity, involvement, interaction, and influence. Here we present several water-security research and action projects where some of these attributes may be present. Among these, a more comprehensive form of a dialogic network was intentionally created via AQUASEC, a virtual center and network initially fostered by a series of grants from the Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research. Subsequently, AQUASEC has significantly expanded to other regions through direct linkages and additional program support for the International Water Security Network, supported by Lloyd's Register Foundation and other sources. This paper highlights major scientific and policy achievements of a notable suite of science-policy networks, shared practices, methods, and knowledge integrating science and policy, as well as the main barriers overcome in network development. An important gap that remains for future research is the assessment and evaluation of dialogic science-policy networks' long-term outcomes.
AB - Addressing wicked problems challenging water security requires participation from multiple stakeholders, often with conflicting visions, complicating the attainment of water-security goals and heightening the need for integrative and effective science-policy interfaces. Sustained multi-stakeholder dialogues within science-policy networks can improve adaptive governance and water system resilience. This paper describes what we define as “dialogic science-policy networks,” or interactions – both in structural and procedural terms – between scientists and policy-makers that are: 1) interdisciplinary, 2) international (here, inter-American), 3) cross-sectoral, 4) open, 5) continual and iterative in the long-term, and 6) flexible. By fostering these types of interactions, dialogic networks achieve what we call the 4-I criteria for effective science-policy dialogues: inclusivity, involvement, interaction, and influence. Here we present several water-security research and action projects where some of these attributes may be present. Among these, a more comprehensive form of a dialogic network was intentionally created via AQUASEC, a virtual center and network initially fostered by a series of grants from the Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research. Subsequently, AQUASEC has significantly expanded to other regions through direct linkages and additional program support for the International Water Security Network, supported by Lloyd's Register Foundation and other sources. This paper highlights major scientific and policy achievements of a notable suite of science-policy networks, shared practices, methods, and knowledge integrating science and policy, as well as the main barriers overcome in network development. An important gap that remains for future research is the assessment and evaluation of dialogic science-policy networks' long-term outcomes.
KW - Arid americas
KW - Dialogic science-policy networks
KW - Science-policy dialogues
KW - Water security
KW - Wicked water problems
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U2 - 10.1016/j.envdev.2020.100568
DO - 10.1016/j.envdev.2020.100568
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85091216055
SN - 2211-4645
VL - 38
JO - Environmental Development
JF - Environmental Development
M1 - 100568
ER -