Towards Place-Based Research to Support Social–Ecological Stewardship
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Stewardship for Sustainable Social–Ecological Systems
2.1. What is Stewardship?
- “explicit recognition of the irreducible pluralism of the competing ‘interests’ in question”; and
- because stewardship is a role played by someone “its moral justification is a function of its overall consistency with our common moral norms, including norms of justice, tolerance, and equity in the distribution of social benefits and burdens” [9] (p. 303).
2.2. What Does it Mean to Study Stewardship Practice in Social–Ecological Systems?
3. Investigating Stewardship Practice in Multifunctional Landscapes
3.1. What Are Landscapes?
- biophysical interpretations i.e., landscape as a purely natural phenomenon;
- anthropogenic interpretations i.e., landscape as nature with human artefacts;
- intangible interpretations i.e., landscape as a cognitive representation of a space, socio-economic interpretations and landscape as socially organised space; and
- coupled social–ecological interpretation i.e., landscape as a totality including both material natural and cultural dimensions as well as spiritual phenomena.
3.2. Managing Landscapes for Multifunctionality Can Enhance Sustainability and Equity
3.3. Landscapes Offer an Appropriate Arena for Social–Ecological Stewardship Practice
4. Collaboration Is a Necessary Focus for Stewardship Research and Practice in Landscapes
Critique of Existing Literature on Collaboration and Social–Ecological Systems
- agency of individual human actors;
- social–relational dynamics among actors as they interact with one another and come together in collectives; and
- situatedness of human interactions in the social–ecological context.
5. The Pathways Approach: A Theoretical Waymark to Deepen Research on Collaboration for Stewardship in Landscapes
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Term | Definition |
---|---|
Environmental stewardship | “Environmental stewardship is the responsible management of human activity affecting the natural environment to ensure the conservation and preservation of natural resources and values for the sake of future generations of human and other life on the planet, together with the acceptance of significant answerability for one’s conduct to society” [9] (p. 303). “The goal of environmental stewardship is to manage human behaviour in order to restore or maintain the integrity of environmental systems and their services to human and other communities of life.” [31] (p. 130) |
Ecosystem stewardship | Ecosystem stewardship is “a strategy to respond to and shape social–ecological systems under conditions of uncertainty and change to sustain the supply and opportunities for use of ecosystem services to support human well-being” [1] (p. 241), or “the active shaping of pathways of social and ecological change for the benefit of ecosystems and society” [32] (p. 40). |
Social–ecological stewardship | A general term which is starting to appear in the literature but is not yet clearly defined [15,33]. We propose the following working definition: “Social–ecological stewardship is the ethical and responsible interaction of humans with social–ecological systems to sustain the supply of diverse ecosystem services and values for the sake of current and future generations of humans and other life on the planet”. |
Body of Literature and Antecedents | Nature of Resource | Nature and Diversity of Collaborating Stakeholders | Main Limitations Relevant to Studying Collaboration in Multifunctional Landscapes | Further Reading and Case Studies |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. Common Pool Resource management (CPRM) [81,91]. Draws on institutional analysis and game theory. Links to literature on social capital [92,93] and social network analysis [94]. | Mostly single-resource focus e.g., fisheries, forests, irrigation systems; at the local resource user level. | Local resource users, can include some involvement of support stakeholders. | Single resource focus, takes a strongly institutional approach to collaboration, does not sufficiently account for interdependencies among multiple actors and resources. See [89,95,96] for critiques. | [91,97,98] |
2. Community-Based Natural Resource Management (CBNRM) [82,99,100]. Draws on CPRM theory [81]. | Single or multiple resource focus (depending on context), at the local community level; devolution of power to local communities, often focused on wildlife management. | Local resource users, can include some involvement of support stakeholders or researchers. Focus is on decentralising resource management. | Primarily focused on developing country context and subsistence resource use; often focused on participation rather than collaboration; critiques of efficacy or success e.g., see [95]. | [101,102] |
3. Collaborative Natural Resource Management (CNRM) [78,79,84]. Draws on organisational learning; policy and planning, and governance literature [77,103]. Also called collaborative governance of natural resources. | Single or multiple resources, usually driven through policy per sector, at various levels from local to landscape; includes management of forests, watersheds, wild fire, rangelands. | Local resource users and community representatives, industry representatives, government officials, researchers, etc. | Often driven by policy and legislation and with strong institutional governance approaches; comparatively well-resourced and capacitated initiatives run by government officials in developed countries. | [70,104,105] |
4. Various collaborative and participatory approaches to forest management (‘collaborative forest approaches’) [106,107]. Links to CBNRM, ILA, CM and ACM. | Multiple resources, implementation focused at local level (some at landscape level); mostly in the tropics e.g., participatory forest management, collaborative governance of tropical landscapes. | Local resource users and community representatives, industry representatives, government officials, researchers, etc. Often driven by NGOs, international development organisations. | Appears not be a well-developed, cohesive body of academic literature on collaboration specifically; many of the lessons and case studies published in grey literature, using different terminology and conceptual framings. | [87,108,109] |
5. Co-management (CM) [110] and Adaptive Co-management (ACM) [80]. Links to literature on CPRM, resilience and social–ecological systems, social capital [92,93] and social network analysis [94]. | Single or multiple resources, implementation focused at local level but emphasis on cross-level collaboration, polycentric governance, and learning. | Local resource users, community representatives, industry representatives, government officials, researchers, etc.; focus on power-sharing between community and government. | Mostly single resource focus, strong focus on institutional aspects of collaboration, but with recognition of local knowledge, social learning and cross-scale linkages. Literature mostly from developed countries in well-resourced contexts. | [111,112,113,114] |
6. Integrated Landscape Approaches (ILA) [47,48,115]. Some links to landscape restoration and landscape planning literature; draws on its predecessor ‘Integrated Natural Resource Management’ (INRM) [116]. | Multiple resources and sectors, planning at landscape level, action locally focused; usually emphasises multiple ecosystem services;cross-level collaboration beyond the local level. | Emphasises cross-sectoral collaboration: resource users, support stakeholders, government officials, private partners and investors, researchers etc. | Often focused on participation rather than collaboration, insufficient theoretical rigour and development (strong policy and practice focus) [88]. | [47,115,117] |
7. Collaboration in Complex, Contested Contexts (CCCC) [18,89,118]. Links to literature on complexity thinking [119] and critical institutionalism [120]. | Multiple resources, multiple stakeholders, cross-level focus; focuses on interactions among multiple actors and resources, recognises human agency and interdependency as pivotal. | Multiple stakeholders with contested interests, local resource users, support stakeholders, government; recognition of marginalised groups. | A new, emerging field of research, dispersed literature, limited theoretical development and empirical case studies. | [78,86,108,121,122]. |
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Cockburn, J.; Cundill, G.; Shackleton, S.; Rouget, M. Towards Place-Based Research to Support Social–Ecological Stewardship. Sustainability 2018, 10, 1434. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10051434
Cockburn J, Cundill G, Shackleton S, Rouget M. Towards Place-Based Research to Support Social–Ecological Stewardship. Sustainability. 2018; 10(5):1434. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10051434
Chicago/Turabian StyleCockburn, Jessica, Georgina Cundill, Sheona Shackleton, and Mathieu Rouget. 2018. "Towards Place-Based Research to Support Social–Ecological Stewardship" Sustainability 10, no. 5: 1434. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10051434
APA StyleCockburn, J., Cundill, G., Shackleton, S., & Rouget, M. (2018). Towards Place-Based Research to Support Social–Ecological Stewardship. Sustainability, 10(5), 1434. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10051434