from institutions to governance, part 1
TRANSCRIPT
Why does this matter?
Because governance is becoming increasingly complex, and provides more
space for self-organization!
Compare with Folke et al (2005)
Global changes in the political landscape
Decentralization
Public Private Partnerships
Non-governmental organizations
International agreements
Centralized decision-making
Central policy-maker (e.g. environmentalministry)
Regional or local state authorities
Local natural resource users
Decision-making
Implementation and monitoring
Behavioral response
Decision-making in complex governance systems
Central policy-maker (e.g. environmental ministry)
Regional or local state authorities
Local natural resource users
Decision-making,implementation,negotiations,partnerships
Implementation, monitoring, negotiations, partnerships
International norms, agreements
Decentralization
Non-state actors
Adaptive Management Adaptive Co-management
Holling (1978): AM, iterated process in the face of uncertainty, experimentation, continuous evaluations
Co-management! Adaptive, learning, sharing of
decision-making btw stakeholders
Fikret Berkes and colleagues
Adaptive Governance
Extension of adaptive co-management:
* not place bound * can include and explore, several place bound attempts of ACM at the same time * polycentric * higher levels of social organization, up to global * explorative framework!
Making Sense of Complexity in Governance
All systems don’t look the same!
Two approaches i) Governance typologies
ii) Network typologies
Governance typology, example - Urban Governance
Jon Pierre and Guy B. Peters
Participants Objectives
Instruments Outcomes
.....
Urban Governance
1980s, is a Darwinistic perspective on local economic development; cities
that cannot sustain their economic growth should not be artificially supported
by national government. Furthermore, inwelfare states such as the Scandina-
vian countries and theNetherlands, the central state has experienced growing
budget deficits, which has led to cutbacks in local government grants. Sup-
porting declining cities and regions, therefore, is no longer an option.
Table 1 summarizes the fourmodels of urban governance. Patterns of sub-
ordination describe different relationships between urban economic policy
and the market economy. In both positive and negative subordination, urban
policy is responding to, rather than proactively governing, the economy. In
positive subordination, urban policies conform and contribute to the market
economy, whereas negative subordinationmeans that urban economic devel-
opment policy is so constrained by the capitalist economy that it is effectively
unable to make a contribution to the functioning of the economic system.10
Hula (1993, 38) described local government restructuring as a case of posi-
tive subordination; local governments are restructuring in ways “that mobi-
lize types and levels of private resources not normally available to purely
public institutions,” in ways “that shift program goals toward traditional eco-
nomic elites,” and in ways “that may reduce popular control.”
As Table 1 suggests, there are such distinct differences between the four
governance models that conflict within the city administrative apparatus
should only be expected. Cities tend to contain these different institutions by
allowing for a multiorganizational and fragmented structure in which differ-
ent segments of the organization are enabled to develop different models of
governance. It remains clear that the differences in perspective on urban poli-
tics that the models display suggest that urban “ungovernability” is in part
388 URBAN AFFAIRS REVIEW / January 1999
TABLE 1: Models of Urban Governance: Defining Characteristics
Models of Urban Governance
Defining Characteristics Managerial Corporatist Progrowth Welfare
Policy objectives Efficiency Distribution Growth Redistribution
Policy style Pragmatic Ideological Pragmatic Ideological
Nature of political exchange Consensus Conflict Consensus Conflict
Nature of public-private exchange Competitive Concerted Interactive Restrictive
Local state-citizen relationship Exclusive Inclusive Exclusive Inclusive
Primary contingency Professionals Civic leaders Business The state
Key instruments Contracts Deliberations Partnerships Networks
Pattern of subordination Positive Negative Positive Negative
Key evaluative criterion Efficiency Participation Growth Equity
at Stockholms Universitet on November 17, 2010uar.sagepub.comDownloaded from
From Pierre (1999), Urban Affairs Review
ii) Network typologies - polycentric systems
Vincent Ostrom
Polycentric systems - many centers of decision making that are formally independent of each other.
“Many elements are capable of making mutual adjustments for ordering their relationships with one another within a general system of rules where each element acts with independence of other elements.”
FAOICES
World BankIUCN
UNEP
WorldFish Centre
UNESCOGlobal Forum on Oceans
Coasts and Islands
UN Ocean
PacFaGPA-MarineICRI