4.3 Article

Tragedy averted: The promise of collaboration

Journal

SOCIETY & NATURAL RESOURCES
Volume 17, Issue 10, Pages 881-896

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/08941920490505284

Keywords

collaboration; common-pool resources; compliance; conflict; natural resource management; paradox; shared ownership; social dilemmas; tragedy of the commons

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Environmentalists, for the most part, continue their skepticism of collaborative approaches to environmental and natural resource decision making, particularly on public lands. Such approaches, many have argued, are an abdication of government authority, circumvent environmental laws, lead to lowest common denominator solutions, are not accountable to public and scientific review processes, and are undemocratic. Environmentalists can point to. awed decision-making processes that contain these elements. Such processes, however, are generally not publicly and statutorily accountable collaborative processes. Moreover, thoughtful and accountable collaborative approaches, more than other kinds of decision-making processes, hold promise that other decision-making approaches lack-that of creating a sense of shared ownership of our larger and more complex problems. Achieving shared ownership, and ultimately averting the inevitable tragedies of the commons facing society today, requires a shift in how decision-making processes are structured and managed. This article explores paradoxical barriers to creating a culture of shared ownership and the role of collaboration in overcoming those barriers.

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