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Critical Reflections on Building a Community of Conversation about Water Governance in Australia

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dc.contributor.author Rubensteinn, Naomi
dc.contributor.author Wallis, Philip J.
dc.contributor.author Ison, Raymond L.
dc.contributor.author Godden, Lee
dc.date.accessioned 2016-06-17T17:57:58Z
dc.date.available 2016-06-17T17:57:58Z
dc.date.issued 2016 en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10535/10041
dc.description.abstract "Water governance has emerged as a field of research endeavour in response to failures of current and historical management approaches to adequately address persistent decline in ecological health of many river catchments and pressures on associated communities. Attention to situational framing is a key aspect of emerging approaches to water governance research, including innovations that build capacity and confidence to experiment with approaches capable of transforming situations usefully framed as ‘wicked’. Despite international investment in water governance research, a national research agenda on water governance was lacking in Australia in the late 2000s as were mechanisms to build the capacity of interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary research and collaborative policy practice. Through a two-year Water Governance Research Initiative (WGRI), we designed and facilitated the development of a community of conversation between researchers concerned with the dynamics of human-ecological systems from the natural sciences, humanities, social sciences, policy, economics, law and philosophy. The WGRI was designed as a learning system, with the intention that it would provide opportunities for conversations, learning and reflection to emerge. In this paper we outline the starting conditions and design of the WGRI, critically reflect on new narratives that arose from this initiative, and evaluate its effectiveness as a boundary organisation that contributed to knowledge co-production in water governance. Our findings point to the importance of investment in institutions that can act as integrative and facilitative governance mechanisms, to build capacity to work with and between research, policy, local stakeholders and practitioners." en_US
dc.language English en_US
dc.subject water management en_US
dc.subject networks en_US
dc.title Critical Reflections on Building a Community of Conversation about Water Governance in Australia en_US
dc.type Journal Article en_US
dc.type.published inpress en_US
dc.type.methodology Theory en_US
dc.coverage.region Pacific and Australia en_US
dc.coverage.country Australia en_US
dc.subject.sector Water Resource & Irrigation en_US
dc.identifier.citationjournal Water Alternatives en_US


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