Climate change adaptation in European river basins

被引:0
作者
Patrick Huntjens
Claudia Pahl-Wostl
John Grin
机构
[1] University of Osnabruck,Institute for Environmental Systems Research
[2] University of Amsterdam,Amsterdam School for Social Science Research
来源
Regional Environmental Change | 2010年 / 10卷
关键词
Standardized comparative analysis; Adaptive and integrated water management (AIWM); Water management regime; River basin management; Climate change adaptation; Floods; Droughts; Hungary; Portugal; Netherlands; Ukraine;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This paper contains an assessment and standardized comparative analysis of the current water management regimes in four case-studies in three European river basins: the Hungarian part of the Upper Tisza, the Ukrainian part of the Upper Tisza (also called Zacarpathian Tisza), Alentejo Region (including the Alqueva Reservoir) in the Lower Guadiana in Portugal, and Rivierenland in the Netherlands. The analysis comprises several regime elements considered to be important in adaptive and integrated water management: agency, awareness raising and education, type of governance and cooperation structures, information management and—exchange, policy development and—implementation, risk management, and finances and cost recovery. This comparative analysis has an explorative character intended to identify general patterns in adaptive and integrated water management and to determine its role in coping with the impacts of climate change on floods and droughts. The results show that there is a strong interdependence of the elements within a water management regime, and as such this interdependence is a stabilizing factor in current management regimes. For example, this research provides evidence that a lack of joint/participative knowledge is an important obstacle for cooperation, or vice versa. We argue that there is a two-way relationship between information management and collaboration. Moreover, this research suggests that bottom-up governance is not a straightforward solution to water management problems in large-scale, complex, multiple-use systems, such as river basins. Instead, all the regimes being analyzed are in a process of finding a balance between bottom-up and top–down governance. Finally, this research shows that in a basin where one type of extreme is dominant—like droughts in the Alentejo (Portugal) and floods in Rivierenland (Netherlands)—the potential impacts of other extremes are somehow ignored or not perceived with the urgency they might deserve.
引用
收藏
页码:263 / 284
页数:21
相关论文
共 108 条
  • [1] Adger WN(2005)Successful adaptation to climate change across scales Glob Environ Change 15 77-86
  • [2] Arnell NW(2002)Decentralization of governance and development J Econ Perspect 16 185-205
  • [3] Tompkins E(1992)The lessons of learning: reconciling theories of policy learning and policy change Policy Sci 25 275-294
  • [4] Bardhan P(2008)Doing reflexive modernization in pig husbandry: the hard work of changing the course of a river Sci Technol Human Values 33 480-507
  • [5] Bennett CJ(2004)Civil society participation in the decentralisation of Brazil’s water resources: assessing participation in three states Singap J Trop Geogr 25 304-321
  • [6] Howlett M(2008)Towards a relational concept of uncertainty: about knowing too little, knowing too differently, and accepting not to know Ecol Soc 13 30-205
  • [7] Bos B(1993)On compliance Int Organ 47 175-161
  • [8] Grin J(1998)Models of policy discourse: insights versus prediction Policy Stud J 26 147-275
  • [9] Brannstrom C(2007)Summer heat waves over western Europe 1880–2003, their relationship to large-scale forcings and predictability Clim Dyn 29 251-1912
  • [10] Clarke J(2003)The struggle to govern the commons Science 302 1907-8.33