Conflict Management in Participatory Approaches to Water Management: A Case Study of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River Regulation

The International Joint Commission (IJC) has been involved in a 14-year effort to formulate a new water regulation plan for the Lake Ontario St. Lawrence River (“LOSLR”) area that balances the interests of a diverse group of stakeholders including shipping and navigation, hydropower, environment, re...

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Published in:Water
Main Authors: Alison Furber, Wietske Medema, Jan Adamowski, Murray Clamen, Meetu Vijay
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/w8070280
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2073-4441/8/7/280/ 2023-08-20T04:06:35+02:00 Conflict Management in Participatory Approaches to Water Management: A Case Study of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River Regulation Alison Furber Wietske Medema Jan Adamowski Murray Clamen Meetu Vijay agris 2016-07-08 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/w8070280 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Water Resources Management, Policy and Governance https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w8070280 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Water; Volume 8; Issue 7; Pages: 280 conflict participation Shared Vision Planning Lake Ontario St. Lawrence River Text 2016 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/w8070280 2023-07-31T20:54:56Z The International Joint Commission (IJC) has been involved in a 14-year effort to formulate a new water regulation plan for the Lake Ontario St. Lawrence River (“LOSLR”) area that balances the interests of a diverse group of stakeholders including shipping and navigation, hydropower, environment, recreational boating, municipal and domestic water supply, First Nations, and shoreline property owners. It has embraced the principles of collaborative and participatory management and, applying a Shared Visioning Planning (SVP) approach, has worked closely with stakeholders throughout all stages of this process; however, conflicts between competing stakeholders have delayed and complicated this effort. The overarching aim of this paper is to consider the extent to which the SVP approach employed by the IJC was effective in managing conflict in the LOSLR context. Audio recordings and transcriptions of public and technical hearings held by the IJC in 2013 have been systematically analysed using stakeholder mapping and content analysis methods, to gain insight into the stakeholder universe interacting with the IJC on Plan 2014. The principal conclusions of this paper are that (a) the Shared Vision Planning approach employed by the IJC had some significant successes in terms of conflict management—particularly notable is the success that has been achieved with regards to integration of First Nation concerns; (b) there is a distinct group of shoreline property owners, based in New York State, who remain opposed to Plan 2014—the IJC’s public outreach and participation efforts have not been successful in reconciling their position with that of other stakeholders due to the fact that this stakeholder group perceive that they can only lose out from any regulation change and are therefore unlikely to be motivated to engage productively in any planning dialogue; and (c) a solution would require that the problem be reframed so that this stakeholder can see that they do in fact have something to gain from a successful resolution, ... Text First Nations MDPI Open Access Publishing Lawrence River ENVELOPE(-115.002,-115.002,58.384,58.384) Water 8 7 280
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic conflict
participation
Shared Vision Planning
Lake Ontario
St. Lawrence River
spellingShingle conflict
participation
Shared Vision Planning
Lake Ontario
St. Lawrence River
Alison Furber
Wietske Medema
Jan Adamowski
Murray Clamen
Meetu Vijay
Conflict Management in Participatory Approaches to Water Management: A Case Study of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River Regulation
topic_facet conflict
participation
Shared Vision Planning
Lake Ontario
St. Lawrence River
description The International Joint Commission (IJC) has been involved in a 14-year effort to formulate a new water regulation plan for the Lake Ontario St. Lawrence River (“LOSLR”) area that balances the interests of a diverse group of stakeholders including shipping and navigation, hydropower, environment, recreational boating, municipal and domestic water supply, First Nations, and shoreline property owners. It has embraced the principles of collaborative and participatory management and, applying a Shared Visioning Planning (SVP) approach, has worked closely with stakeholders throughout all stages of this process; however, conflicts between competing stakeholders have delayed and complicated this effort. The overarching aim of this paper is to consider the extent to which the SVP approach employed by the IJC was effective in managing conflict in the LOSLR context. Audio recordings and transcriptions of public and technical hearings held by the IJC in 2013 have been systematically analysed using stakeholder mapping and content analysis methods, to gain insight into the stakeholder universe interacting with the IJC on Plan 2014. The principal conclusions of this paper are that (a) the Shared Vision Planning approach employed by the IJC had some significant successes in terms of conflict management—particularly notable is the success that has been achieved with regards to integration of First Nation concerns; (b) there is a distinct group of shoreline property owners, based in New York State, who remain opposed to Plan 2014—the IJC’s public outreach and participation efforts have not been successful in reconciling their position with that of other stakeholders due to the fact that this stakeholder group perceive that they can only lose out from any regulation change and are therefore unlikely to be motivated to engage productively in any planning dialogue; and (c) a solution would require that the problem be reframed so that this stakeholder can see that they do in fact have something to gain from a successful resolution, ...
format Text
author Alison Furber
Wietske Medema
Jan Adamowski
Murray Clamen
Meetu Vijay
author_facet Alison Furber
Wietske Medema
Jan Adamowski
Murray Clamen
Meetu Vijay
author_sort Alison Furber
title Conflict Management in Participatory Approaches to Water Management: A Case Study of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River Regulation
title_short Conflict Management in Participatory Approaches to Water Management: A Case Study of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River Regulation
title_full Conflict Management in Participatory Approaches to Water Management: A Case Study of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River Regulation
title_fullStr Conflict Management in Participatory Approaches to Water Management: A Case Study of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River Regulation
title_full_unstemmed Conflict Management in Participatory Approaches to Water Management: A Case Study of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River Regulation
title_sort conflict management in participatory approaches to water management: a case study of lake ontario and the st. lawrence river regulation
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2016
url https://doi.org/10.3390/w8070280
op_coverage agris
long_lat ENVELOPE(-115.002,-115.002,58.384,58.384)
geographic Lawrence River
geographic_facet Lawrence River
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Water; Volume 8; Issue 7; Pages: 280
op_relation Water Resources Management, Policy and Governance
https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w8070280
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/w8070280
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