Multi-stakeholder communication and coordination

For the last fifteen years the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA) provided financial support to environment and development initiatives in the Baltic Sea region (BSR). One of these initiatives, the "Agriculture and Environment in Leningrad Oblast" program (AELO), w...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kenov, Kaloyan Nikolaev
Format: Text
Language:Swedish
English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/378/1/kenov_k_090714.pdf
Description
Summary:For the last fifteen years the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA) provided financial support to environment and development initiatives in the Baltic Sea region (BSR). One of these initiatives, the "Agriculture and Environment in Leningrad Oblast" program (AELO), was pointed out as successful in establishing a multi-stakeholder pilot activity in North West Russia (NWR). This thesis work is taking the reader on a research enquiry through the second phase of the AELO program, named "Agriculture, Environment and Ecosystem Health in North West Russia" (AEEHLO), exploring the interactions between multi-stakeholder processes with communication and coordination, based on the concept of "Multi-stakeholder platform" (MSP) as a "space for change". For this, Soft System Methodology (SSM) methods and techniques are used to appraise the second phase program's communication and coordination imprints and its MSP. The quest for program communication and coordination is interesting because of the complexity of the human interactions involved and because of the program's structural uncertainty as it is in a constant development flux. The evidence material for this research is based on secondary data, focus group discussions, oral interviews, a multi-stakeholder program meeting, and all this wrapped in the SSM enquiry process used for navigation. As emergent of this work is the hope to bring home contribution to the knowledge area of multi-stakeholder processes and platforms governed by communication, negotiation, and coordination. The results of the research show that the success of the AEEHLO program as a multi-stakeholder platform depends on the ability of its stakeholders, from the authority and nonauthority side, to collaborate in mutual sharing and understanding, and in collaborative definition of interrelated issues. Another result is that AEEHLO as a program can be viewed as a "space for change" in which coordination and collaboration between the stakeholders generate a spirit for commitment to ...