Setting a pluralist agenda for water governance: Why power and scale matter

Author:

Macpherson Elizabeth1ORCID,Cuppari Rosa I.2ORCID,Kagawa‐Viviani Aurora3ORCID,Brause Holly4ORCID,Brewer William A.5ORCID,Grant William E.6ORCID,Herman‐Mercer Nicole7ORCID,Livneh Ben8ORCID,Neupane Kaustuv Raj910ORCID,Petach Tanya11ORCID,Peters Chelsea N.12ORCID,Wang Hsiao‐Hsuan6ORCID,Pahl‐Wostl Claudia13ORCID,Wheater Howard14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Law University of Canterbury Canterbury New Zealand

2. Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering I Gillings School of Global Public Health I Center on Financial Risk in Environmental Systems I UNC Institute for the Environment The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

3. Water Resources Research Center I Department of Geography and Environment University of Hawai'i at Manoa Honolulu Hawaii USA

4. Department of Anthropology I New Mexico Water Resources Research Institute New Mexico State University Las Cruces New Mexico USA

5. The Institute of Ecological, Earth, and Environmental Science Baylor University Waco Texas USA

6. Ecological Systems Laboratory Department of Ecology and Conservation Biology Texas A&M University College Station Texas USA

7. United States Geological Survey Office of Water Information Middleton Wisconsin USA

8. Western Water Assessment I Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences I Department of Civil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering University of Colorado Boulder Boulder Colorado USA

9. South Asia Institute of Advanced Studies Kathmandu Nepal

10. College of Agricultural, Consumer, and Environmental Sciences New Mexico State University Las Cruces New Mexico USA

11. Aspen Global Change Institute Basalt Colorado USA

12. Environmental Studies Roanoke College Salem Virginia USA

13. Institute for Environmental Systems Research I Institute of Geography Osnabrück University Osnabruck Germany

14. Dept of Civil and Environmental Engineering Imperial College London London UK

Abstract

AbstractGlobal water systems are facing unprecedented pressures, including climate change‐driven drought and escalating flood risk, environmental contamination, and over allocation. Water management and governance typically lack integration across spatial scales, including relationships between surface and ground water systems. They also routinely ignore connectivity across temporal scales, including the need for intergenerational water planning. As a global and interdisciplinary group of scientists, we seek to highlight how power and scale dynamics influence and determine water outcomes. We argue that attending to complex water systems challenges requires understanding the function and influence of power at different temporal and spatial scales. Building this understanding is key to designing multi‐scalar, reflexive, and pluralistic policy solutions that avoid ineffective or unintended outcomes. We use a co‐learning process to reveal important lessons for the challenge of interdisciplinary research and set a pluralist agenda for understanding power and scale in future water governance.This article is categorized under: Human Water > Water Governance Human Water > Water as Imagined and Represented Human Water > Methods

Funder

Norges Forskningsråd

Publisher

Wiley

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