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Title

Multilevel water quality management in the international Rhine catchment area: how to establish social-ecological fit through collaborative governance.

Authors

Widmer, Alexander; Herzog, Laura; Moser, Andreas; Ingold, Karin

Abstract

One major challenge of water quality management is that the source of pollution and its effects might be spatially disentangled. This cause-effect misfit has large implications on how surface water in a hydrological catchment area is managed and regulated. We argue in this paper that such misfit can best be addressed through interconnected and multilevel collaborative arrangements that support institutional capacity building. In line with recent literature, we presume that social-ecological fit can be enhanced through direct collaboration among actors managing the same or interconnected ecosystem units. To study the social-ecological fit, we analyze three subcatchments of the international river basin of the Rhine. Our data on actor collaboration, on inter-related subcatchments, and on actor and subcatchment connections are analyzed through network analysis and motif counts. Our results show social-ecological fit to emerge in less complex comanagement situations, e.g., when one resource unit lies in the competence of two actors, or if one actor is responsible for two units. To a lesser extent, there is also evidence for more complex, multilevel collaboration arrangements among actors.

Subjects

WATER quality management; CAPACITY building; WATER

Publication

Ecology & Society, 2019, Vol 24, Issue 3, p111

ISSN

1708-3087

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.5751/ES-11087-240327

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