Title: INTEGRATED WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT, PARTNERSHIPS AND POWER
1INTEGRATED WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT,
PARTNERSHIPS AND POWER
- Bruce Mitchell
- University of Waterloo
- Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
2INTEGRATED WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
- Integrated to make into a whole, to put or
bring together parts into a whole. (World Book
Dictionary) - For integration to occur,
- Collaboration (act of working together) and
Coordination (harmonious adjustment or working
together, or, arranging in proper order and
relationships) (World Book Dictionary) normally
are necessary.
3- Integration is a means, not an ends.
- IWRM should be preceded by a shared vision about
a desired future condition. - Nanus (1992) a vision is a realistic, credible,
attractive future.... - A vision articulates the destination towards
which a group or society agrees to aim. The
vision represents a future which in significant
ways is better or more desirable than the
present. - Without such direction, it is difficult to
determine which parts need to be brought together
into a whole, and who should be working together
to arrange proper order and relationships.
4- Rationale for integration as a means to help in
achieving a vision - Allows the desired future condition to be
achieved - effectively produce the desired effects,
- efficiently produce the desired effects without
waste of time and energy, and - equitably ensure benefits and costs of the
desired effects are distributed fairly among
people in space and time.
5PARTNERSHIPS AND PARTICIPATION
- Collaboration and cooperation normally require
- Partners people or groups who share risks and
gains, and - Participation sharing taking part
- In IWRM, one outcome for stakeholders should be
- Empowerment achieving or gaining power.
6- Rationale for partnerships and participatory
approaches - define problems more effectively,
- access information and understanding outside of
the scientific realm, - identify socially acceptable solutions, and
- create a new sense of ownership of both problems
and solutions, leading to more effective and
efficient implementation
7Desirable Attributes for a Partnership
- Compatibility between participants based on
mutual trust and respect, even when from time to
time legitimately different needs and
expectations may exist. - Integrity, patience and perseverance by all
partners. Obstacles will need to be overcome,
and progress will not always occur as quickly as
everyone would like. Combined with mutual trust
and respect, these three attributes help partners
deal with difficult situations. - Adaptability allows a partnership to respond
positively to inevitable change, uncertainty and
conflict.
8Desirable Attributes (contd)
- Equitable power for partners (does not mean equal
power). Even when differential power is held, all
partners must be able to be involved, and feel
valued. - Benefits to all partners. If no prospect of
benefits for all partners, and if benefits will
not be distributed or shared equitably, prospects
for a sustained partnership are low. - Communication channels. Potential for
misunderstanding and miscommunication always
exists, even in the presence of mutual trust and
respect.
9Effective Partnerships
- Viessman (1993 14)
- ... partnering must be based on an understanding
that the missions, legislative mandates, and
administrative policies among partners may be
very different. It requires that differences in
view be identified and accepted, and that
commonalities in interest be sought as the
building blocks for consensus. The goal should
be to ensure that there are no real losers, that
all receive some spoils in pursuing a common
target. Partners must recognize that trade-offs
must be made to improve the collective whole. A
necessary condition for establishing mutual trust
is that partnering arrangements be open, frank
and honest. Unless that condition is met, there
will be little incentive for meaningful
cooperation.
10POWER
- Power strength, might, force authority,
control, influence (World Book Dictionary) - Authority, control, influence mean power to
direct or to act on others - Authority applies to legal power, given by a
persons position or office, to give commands and
enforce obedience. - Control applies to power, given by a persons
position, to direct people and things. - Influence applies to personal power, coming
from a persons character, personality or
position, to shape the actions of others. - Partnerships and participatory approaches
normally involve reallocation of authority and
control.
11THREE TYPES OF TENSION RELATED TO IWRM,
PARTNERSHIPS, AND POWER
- Collaboration versus Competition
- Cooperation and Collaboration
- Imply willingness of two or more people or groups
to work together. - Imply sharing of information, knowledge,
expertise, and resources along with risks and
benefits from working together. - Motivation different individuals or groups
contribute specific knowledge, experience and
expertise, which when combined lets the
partnership accomplish goals not achievable by
any one participant.
12- Competition
- Competition to try hard to obtain something
wanted by others be rivals contend to strive
for preeminence (World Book Dictionary). - Partnerships assume a willingness to collaborate
and cooperate. - Humans often are competitive, and highly
motivated by self interest.
13- Implication
- More time and care needed to create management
processes based on the presence of competition
related to satisfying self interest, rather than
on willingness to share, be open, and cooperate.
- Significantly, need to design partnerships, both
formal and informal, to take advantage of the
likelihood of ongoing competition and conflict,
based on differing values and interests, to
ensure that conflict can be a positive force.
14- Homogeneous versus Heterogeneous Publics
- Infrequently one public or one public interest
normally, many publics with diverse and often
conflicting interests. - Distinction often made between active and
inactive publics. - Active public easily heard from.
- Challenge is to ensure that active publics
represent full range of public interests. - Much public participation initiatives focus on
the inactive public.
15- Big Picture versus Local Perspective
- IWRM focuses on entire system, or on big
picture. - Many individuals and groups interested only in a
part of the entire system. - Challenges
- how to take big picture view, yet be sensitive
to specific local conditions - how to reconcile conflicts among different
localized interests and groups.
16STRATEGIES TO ADDRESS TENSIONS
CONTEXT
VISION
- Mix of Leverage Points to achieve IWRM
CREDIBILITY
FUNCTIONS
CULTURE ATTITUDES
STRUCTURE
PROCESSES MECHANISMS
17- Mix of Participatory Mechanisms for IWRM
Rungs Nature of Involvement Degrees of Power Sharing
1. Manipulation Rubberstamp committees
2. Therapy Powerholders educate or cure citizens Non-participation
3. Informing Citizens rights and options are identified
4. Consultation Citizens are heard but not necessarily heeded Degrees of tokenism
5. Placation Advice is received from citizens but not acted upon
6. Partnership Trade-offs are negotiated
7. Delegated Citizens are given management power for all or parts of programs Degrees of citizen power
8. Citizen control
Source S. Arnstein, A Ladder of Citizen
Participation, Journal of the American Institute
of Planners 35, no. 4 (1969)216-24.1
18- Mix of Scales for IWRM and Partnership Approaches
- Entire Catchment Create a catchment-based
stakeholder group with representation from all
sub-areas and sectors in the basin. - Provides a big picture perspective, to consider
a full range of values and interests, and
associated conflicts, such as those involving
different priorities due to different spatial
interests (such as from upstream and downstream
communities) or different sectoral interests
(such as from forestry, agriculture, wildlife,
recreation, etc.).
19- Sub-Catchments In parallel with the
catchment-wide group, sub-catchment groups ensure
the catchment-wide group does not get overwhelmed
by the many interests and conflicts across an
entire basin, and also does not develop
strategies or initiatives that do not make sense
in sub-catchments. - Several members from each sub-catchment group
become members of the catchment-wide group, to
ensure that the spatial and sectoral views from
each sub-catchment is shared at the catchment
scale.
20ELEMENTS OF BEST PRACTICE FOR IWRM AND
PARTNERSHIPS
- Importance of understanding and appreciating the
context or local conditions which require
capacity to custom design solutions. - Appreciation of the need to take a long-term
perspective. Problems usually were not created
in a few years and therefore are unlikely to be
resolved quickly. Decades often are required to
stop or reverse degradation, or to resolve
scarcity problems.
21BEST PRACTICE (contd)
- Importance of having a vision or desirable
direction so that there is a clear understanding
about the desired future condition. - Legitimacy or credibility for an integrated and
collaborative approach must be established, best
achieved through ongoing commitment from
political and other leaders in local communities.
22BEST PRACTICE (contd)
- A leader or champion who will continue to work
for and support an integrated and collaborative
approach through inevitable set backs,
disappointments and frustrations. Such a
committed leader often is the key factor related
to success. - Willingness to share or redistribute power is
usually necessary, if significant change is to
occur.
23BEST PRACTICE (contd)
- A multi-stakeholder group should be created to
ensure that processes are representative, open,
transparent and accessible. - Decisions by the multi-stakeholder group should
be based on consensus, the best way to ensure
long-term commitment from the community to accept
decisions.
24BEST PRACTICE (contd)
- Awareness of the likelihood of burnout by
volunteers from the community who participate in
IWRM. -
- There never can be enough time devoted to
communication within and between groups. Such
communication should be done in plain language
to ensure all participants are kept informed and
updated. progress regarding decisions and plan
recommendations.