Governance Arrangements for Water Reuse: Assessing Emerging Trends for Inter-Municipal Cooperation through a Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Findings
3.1. General Characteristics of the Literature Review
3.2. Emerging Knowledge and Gaps in the Literature
3.2.1. Inter-Municipal Cooperation
Knowledge | Gaps | |
---|---|---|
Governance | - IMC offers cross-jurisdictional and large-scale plans and a shared vision [29,30,31] - IMC also leads to solving administrative capacity problems (in smaller cities) [32] - IMC reduces the threat of private developers (real estate) [14] - The success of cooperation can be affected by the size of the municipal population, the strength of political leadership and experienced managerial staff, and the perception of IMC by municipal officials [32] - Roles of non-governmental stakeholders in cooperative governance networks must be acknowledged [25] - A smaller number of participants with a history of cooperation are more likely to enhance the commitment [36] - IMC has the potential to improve the efficiency of land use planning [33] - The availability of space to construct infrastructure is important [35] - The dominancy of technical and traditional planning approaches limit cooperation [30]; | - To explore factors for success and failure of co-operative arrangements [17] - To study on the role, capacity, and significance of city-regional actors [25] - To identify causal mechanisms for various types of cooperation [19] - To identify cause and effect of governance capacity value [31] - To measure the commitments of authorities [36]; |
Service efficiency | - IMC is an efficient form of service provision [26,37,38,39] - There is no significant effect of IMC on service efficiency [33,40] - Fiscal constraints, spatial, and organisational factors are significant drivers of cooperation [24] - Financial sustainability is critical for IMC arrangement and one of the most important drivers of cooperation [20,41] - Cooperation is more attractive and efficient for smaller municipalities [34,42]; | - To test the benefits and efficiency of IMC [33,40,43] - To identify the model with the most efficient form of service delivery [38] - To explore all possible drivers of service delivery models [44] - To identify ways to reduce the transaction costs of cooperation [45] - To explore the relationship of the size asymmetry and service quality and autonomy costs [15] - To explore the relationship between local government financial health and the financial sustainability of IMC entities [20] - To explore more spatial and organisational factors in cooperation [24]; |
Impacts assessment | - IMC presents a critical factor for ensuring better environmental outcomes in metropolitan areas, as it facilitates policy coherence and widespread enforcement irrespective of the type of metropolitan governance structure [46]. | - To explore the effect of cooperation on environmental outcomes [46]. |
3.2.2. Inter-Municipal Cooperation and Water
Knowledge | Gaps | |
---|---|---|
Governance | - IMC arrangement creates (and has to ensure) a platform for engagement of all actors and stakeholders (public sector, researchers, citizens, and companies) [57,58] - IMC is more collective and transparent, benefiting from shared vision leading to harmonised development of urban infrastructures [50] - Cooperative approach facilitates addressing risks (technical, natural, and social) and trans-boundaries problems (environmental, etc.) [13,52,59] - IMC requires an establishment of: a strong leadership and communication, accompanied by ensuring the stakeholder’s engagement, which is shaped based on citizen perception, conflict solution, and problem solving [13,58]; an acknowledgement of risks including risks about institutional uncertainties (allocation of responsibility), transaction costs, and political costs for individual [59]; a high level of knowledge, competence, and commitment of those engaged in the process of delivering and regulating drinking water [59] addressing the challenges of local government such as the small size of municipalities and fiscal shortages [47]; enhancing political willingness to take actions in wastewater treatment introduces cooperative models as a reliable alternative [47] - IMC brings effective use of land for water management, in terms of locating plants and transport [47] - The water system and urban structure are important for choosing a service delivery model (IMC or privatisation) [52]; | - To understand what an appropriate governance institutional form for each service, regarding the size of the population of municipalities [50] - To evaluate effects of IMC networks on other municipalities’ actions and activities and non-neighbouring interlocal arrangements [58] - To study collective action dilemmas in risk management [59] - To analyse several alternatives and choosing the most feasible one in local circumstances for water strategy [47]; |
Service efficiency | - IMC is beneficial in terms of administrative, and economic factors; IMC introduces an efficient model to address the local government problems (e.g., waste transportation costs, unclear and unfair pricing formation, etc.) [55] - To define joint goals and well-established institutional settings leading to better results in services provision [54] - To check the quality of services based on citizen perceptions [60] - To consider the size of the municipality population as a determinant factor for the success of the cooperation as it is more preferable for smaller municipalities [53,61]; | - To explore and evaluate (viability, cost-efficiency) of different arrangements for public service provisions, regarding the contextual conditions [21,56] - To understand costs and prices of water in different arrangements [62] - To understand the economic and political factors of IA for public services [63]; |
Impacts assessment | - IMC is helpful to incentivise a sustainable urban transition [28]. | - To assess sustainability and other effects of IMC rather than just its economic benefits [16]. |
3.2.3. Inter-Municipal Cooperation and Circular Economy
Knowledge | Gaps | |
---|---|---|
Governance | - Waste management needs collaborative governance (among different sectors and central cities and smaller ones) [64,65,66] - IMC is not necessarily cost saving [73] this cooperation requires a strong political leadership at the local level and longer-term agreements [67] - IMC can be a rational choice for smaller municipalities (under 55000 population); increasing the population over that leads to worsening the efficiency [67] - To consider that the spatial distribution of population on space affects the costs of waste service [69]; | - To study the optimal definition of the geographic boundaries of IMC [27,67]; |
Service efficiency | - The size of the municipal population is an important factor for cooperation seeing that IMC is more popular among small and mid-size cities [69,71,74,75,76] - IMC addresses the financial burden of local governments [70] - IMC brings economies of scale [70,72] - IMC is cost saving in waste collection [77] - IMC makes a platform to share experience, knowledge, and information [74,77] - Cooperation raises collection frequency and improves the quality of the service in small towns [69] - IMC involving spatial interaction with neighbouring municipalities influences the decision making and collaborative action of municipalities to implement recyclables collection and reduce costs [78]; | - To understand factors affecting public service costs [70] to extend the IMC studies for different sectors and services [70] - To understand how institutional mechanisms can lead to cost efficiency [74,76], |
Impacts Assessment | - Small municipalities may seek IMC and adopt integrated waste-management programmes to reduce their environmental impacts [68]. | - To analyse economic aspects next to the analysis of potential energy and GHG emissions [68]. |
4. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Databases | Query Used for the Search | Platforms | Retrieved Articles | Selected Articles for Analysis |
---|---|---|---|---|
IMC | inter-municipal AND cooperation OR collaboration OR intermunicipal AND cooperation OR collaboration OR inter-local AND cooperation OR collaboration OR interlocal AND collaboration OR cooperation | Scopus | 163 | 30 |
IMC and Water | inter-municipal AND cooperation OR collaboration OR intermunicipal AND cooperation OR collaboration OR inter-local AND cooperation OR collaboration OR interlocal AND collaboration OR cooperation AND water | Scopus and Web of Science | 29 | 29 |
IMC and CE | inter-municipal AND cooperation OR collaboration OR intermunicipal AND cooperation OR collaboration OR inter-local AND cooperation OR collaboration OR interlocal AND cooperation OR collaboration AND “circular economy” OR reuse OR recycle OR replenish OR waste | Scopus and Web of Science | 19 | 19 |
Search: on title, abstract, and keywords; limits: language (English), document type limits (articles); date: conducted on 19 September 2021; total 78 articles; |
Dimensions | Contents |
---|---|
Governance | Institutional and governance arrangements and structures, political institutions and the structure of policy networks, policy, planning, geographic considerations, conflict resolutions, commitments and leadership, adaptive management; |
Service efficiency | Scale and density, cost-saving, fiscal factors, transaction cost of IMC, different service delivery performance, the role of the IMC on the performance of local governments on services delivery; |
Impacts assessment of IMC | Impacts of IMP, namely on different service delivery performance on environment, social context, or sustainability. |
Governance | - To enhance the governance capacity, build strong leadership, train the local administrative staff, build trust, and increase transparency [50,52] - To ensure the participation of all actors and stakeholders, (public actors, private sectors and developers, citizens, and researchers) [57,58]; - To consider that cooperation is rooted in space [18] and land use and spatial features matter for a successful cooperation [18,32,33,68,69], also, to adopt a cross-boundary approach articulating land use and water resources management [13] - To adopt a co-creation approach to co-find and co-solve the problems [13] - To improve a platform for sharing knowledge and experiences, for communicating and negotiating [13,14] and to establish a joint goal and shared vision [50] - To identify and understand transboundary risks and institutional risks of cooperation [19,59] - To include the citizen perception in the service delivery assessments [60] - To understand the cooperation on a bigger scale and to identify its effect on neighbours [78]; |
Service efficiency | - To test and analyse the cost efficiency of IMC before reforming into it [22,23] - To analyse the quality and price of services at the cooperation governance [62] - To ensure achieving financial sustainability after cooperation [20] - To understand the size asymmetry, service characteristics, contextual conditions, fiscal constraints, and organisational factors for choosing the best arrangement [15,23,44] - To adopt an ongoing process on reducing the transaction costs of cooperation [45]; |
Impacts assessment | - To assess the sustainability of the chosen institutional arrangement for services [16] - To ensure that the cooperation leads to better social and environmental outcomes [46] - To adopt a coherent approach considering climate change, population growth, and regulatory restrictions to analyse the arrangement alternatives [79]. |
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Riazi, F.; Fidélis, T.; Teles, F. Governance Arrangements for Water Reuse: Assessing Emerging Trends for Inter-Municipal Cooperation through a Literature Review. Water 2022, 14, 2789. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14182789
Riazi F, Fidélis T, Teles F. Governance Arrangements for Water Reuse: Assessing Emerging Trends for Inter-Municipal Cooperation through a Literature Review. Water. 2022; 14(18):2789. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14182789
Chicago/Turabian StyleRiazi, Fayaz, Teresa Fidélis, and Filipe Teles. 2022. "Governance Arrangements for Water Reuse: Assessing Emerging Trends for Inter-Municipal Cooperation through a Literature Review" Water 14, no. 18: 2789. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14182789
APA StyleRiazi, F., Fidélis, T., & Teles, F. (2022). Governance Arrangements for Water Reuse: Assessing Emerging Trends for Inter-Municipal Cooperation through a Literature Review. Water, 14(18), 2789. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14182789