Affiliation:
1. School of Business and Economics Loughborough University Loughborough UK
2. Ecologos Research Ltd Aberystwyth UK
3. Aberystwyth Business School Aberystwyth UK
4. Department of Environment and Geography University of York York UK
Abstract
AbstractParticipative strategy development serves to integrate the interests and perspectives of multiple stakeholders involved in today's complex environmental challenges, aiming at a better‐informed strategy for tackling these challenges, increased stakeholder ownership, and more democratic decision making. Prior research has observed inherent tensions between the need for participative strategy to be open to stakeholders' input and the need for closure and guidance. We extend this reasoning using a framing perspective. Our evidence from the development of the England Peat Action Plan suggests that tensions can emerge between the necessary ambiguous initial framing of intended change and the persistence of stakeholders' different framings of this change as well as perceptions of lacking knowledge, guidance, and control. We argue that strategy openness can thereby impede stakeholders' willingness and ability to change and counteract the strategy's aim for major transformation. Interactive spaces help mitigate the tensions and facilitate stakeholders' willingness and ability for change.Related ArticlesBrant, Hanna K., Nathan Myers, and Katherine L. Runge. 2017. “Promotion, Protection, and Entrepreneurship: Stakeholder Participation and Policy Change in the 21st Century Cures Initiative.” Politics & Policy 45(3): 372–404. https://doi.org/10.1111/polp.12201.Bryson, John R., Michael Taylor, and Peter W. Daniels. 2008. “Commercializing ‘Creative’ Expertise: Business and Professional Services and Regional Economic Development in the West Midlands, United Kingdom.” Politics & Policy 36(2): 306–28. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1747‐1346.2008.00107.x.Falkenström, Erica, and Stefan Svallfors. 2022. “The Knowledge–Management Complex: From Quality Registries to National Knowledge‐Driven Management in Swedish Health Care Governance.” Politics & Policy 50(5): 1053–66. https://doi.org/10.1111/polp.12497.
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
4 articles.
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