期刊
SOCIETY & NATURAL RESOURCES
卷 34, 期 8, 页码 1075-1092出版社
TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/08941920.2021.1934930
关键词
Baltic Sea; co-design of serious games; collaborative decision making; multifunctionality; river basin governance; systemic practice; wicked situations
资金
- BONUS (Art 185) by EU
- BONUS (Art 185) by Formas, a Swedish Research Council for Sustainable Development
- Sweden's Innovation Agency, Vinnova
- The Academy of Finland
- National Centre for Research and Development in Poland
- European Commission
- Svenska Forskningsradet Formas
Science-informed, reductionist policy has failed to effectively address complex problems, requiring systemic practices to deal with interconnected and unpredictable wicked situations. This study shows that game co-design can enhance understanding of wicked situations and facilitate spontaneous cooperation among diverse stakeholders.
Science-informed, reductionist policy has systematically failed to address wicked situations. Such situations are highly interconnected and unpredictable. As a consequence, the implementation of so-called desirable interventions can lead to the export of vulnerabilities within and across different societal domains, sectors, intersections and scales. Systemic practice is an emerging field, and highlights the need to enrich scientific inquiry and policy actions through action learning with an extended peer community'' as a means to navigate wicked situations. In this paper, we report on the potential of game co-design as a systemic practice to improve the situation of Baltic Sea nutrient enrichment. Findings from water catchments in Finland, Sweden and Poland suggest that the co-design of serious games can both enhance the comprehension of wicked situations, and foster self-organized concerted action without imposing a convergence of perspectives amongst diverse stakeholders.
作者
我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。
推荐
暂无数据