Does stakeholder participation improve environmental governance? Evidence from a meta-analysis of 305 case studies

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Does stakeholder participation improve environmental governance? Evidence from a meta-analysis of 305 case studies. / Newig, Jens; Jager, Nicolas Wilhelm; Challies, Edward R.T. et al.
in: Global Environmental Change : Human and Policy Dimensions, Jahrgang 82, 102705, 01.09.2023.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

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@article{aef299afc4e046cca774d02947dc9e12,
title = "Does stakeholder participation improve environmental governance? Evidence from a meta-analysis of 305 case studies",
abstract = "Participation and collaboration of citizens and organized stakeholders in public decision-making is widely believed to improve environmental governance outputs. However, empirical evidence on the benefits of participatory governance is largely scattered across small-N case studies. To synthesize the available case-based evidence, we conducted a broad case-based meta-analysis across 22 Western democracies, including 305 individual cases of public environmental decision-making. We asked: How do {\textquoteleft}more{\textquoteright} participatory decision-making processes compare against {\textquoteleft}less{\textquoteright} participatory ones in fostering – or hindering – strong environmental governance outputs, (i.e. environmental provisions in plans, agreements or permits)? Which design features make a difference? What role does the decision-making context play? How do results change if we control for the intentions of the leading governmental agency? To capture the central design features of decision-making processes, we distinguish three dimensions of participation: the intensity of communication among participants and process organizers; the extent to which participants can shape decisions (“power delegation”); and the extent to which different stakeholder groups are represented. Our regression analysis yields robust evidence that these three design features of participation impact upon the environmental standard of governance outputs, even when controlling for the goals of governmental agencies. Power delegation is shown to be the most stable predictor of strong environmental outputs. However, communication intensity only predicts the conservation-related standard of outputs, but not the environmental health-related standard of outputs. Participants{\textquoteright} environmental stance was another strong predictor, with considerable variation across different contexts. While our results remain broadly stable across a wide range of contexts, certain contextual conditions stood out in shaping the relation between participation and environmental outputs. Overall, our findings can inform the design of participatory processes that deliver governance outputs of a high environmental standard.",
keywords = "Collaborative governance, Context, Effectiveness, Environmental governance, Meta-analysis, Participatory governance, Environmental Governance, Sustainability Governance",
author = "Jens Newig and Jager, {Nicolas Wilhelm} and Challies, {Edward R.T.} and Elisa Kochsk{\"a}mper",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 The Author(s)",
year = "2023",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2023.102705",
language = "English",
volume = "82",
journal = "Global Environmental Change : Human and Policy Dimensions",
issn = "0959-3780",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Does stakeholder participation improve environmental governance? Evidence from a meta-analysis of 305 case studies

AU - Newig, Jens

AU - Jager, Nicolas Wilhelm

AU - Challies, Edward R.T.

AU - Kochskämper, Elisa

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Author(s)

PY - 2023/9/1

Y1 - 2023/9/1

N2 - Participation and collaboration of citizens and organized stakeholders in public decision-making is widely believed to improve environmental governance outputs. However, empirical evidence on the benefits of participatory governance is largely scattered across small-N case studies. To synthesize the available case-based evidence, we conducted a broad case-based meta-analysis across 22 Western democracies, including 305 individual cases of public environmental decision-making. We asked: How do ‘more’ participatory decision-making processes compare against ‘less’ participatory ones in fostering – or hindering – strong environmental governance outputs, (i.e. environmental provisions in plans, agreements or permits)? Which design features make a difference? What role does the decision-making context play? How do results change if we control for the intentions of the leading governmental agency? To capture the central design features of decision-making processes, we distinguish three dimensions of participation: the intensity of communication among participants and process organizers; the extent to which participants can shape decisions (“power delegation”); and the extent to which different stakeholder groups are represented. Our regression analysis yields robust evidence that these three design features of participation impact upon the environmental standard of governance outputs, even when controlling for the goals of governmental agencies. Power delegation is shown to be the most stable predictor of strong environmental outputs. However, communication intensity only predicts the conservation-related standard of outputs, but not the environmental health-related standard of outputs. Participants’ environmental stance was another strong predictor, with considerable variation across different contexts. While our results remain broadly stable across a wide range of contexts, certain contextual conditions stood out in shaping the relation between participation and environmental outputs. Overall, our findings can inform the design of participatory processes that deliver governance outputs of a high environmental standard.

AB - Participation and collaboration of citizens and organized stakeholders in public decision-making is widely believed to improve environmental governance outputs. However, empirical evidence on the benefits of participatory governance is largely scattered across small-N case studies. To synthesize the available case-based evidence, we conducted a broad case-based meta-analysis across 22 Western democracies, including 305 individual cases of public environmental decision-making. We asked: How do ‘more’ participatory decision-making processes compare against ‘less’ participatory ones in fostering – or hindering – strong environmental governance outputs, (i.e. environmental provisions in plans, agreements or permits)? Which design features make a difference? What role does the decision-making context play? How do results change if we control for the intentions of the leading governmental agency? To capture the central design features of decision-making processes, we distinguish three dimensions of participation: the intensity of communication among participants and process organizers; the extent to which participants can shape decisions (“power delegation”); and the extent to which different stakeholder groups are represented. Our regression analysis yields robust evidence that these three design features of participation impact upon the environmental standard of governance outputs, even when controlling for the goals of governmental agencies. Power delegation is shown to be the most stable predictor of strong environmental outputs. However, communication intensity only predicts the conservation-related standard of outputs, but not the environmental health-related standard of outputs. Participants’ environmental stance was another strong predictor, with considerable variation across different contexts. While our results remain broadly stable across a wide range of contexts, certain contextual conditions stood out in shaping the relation between participation and environmental outputs. Overall, our findings can inform the design of participatory processes that deliver governance outputs of a high environmental standard.

KW - Collaborative governance

KW - Context

KW - Effectiveness

KW - Environmental governance

KW - Meta-analysis

KW - Participatory governance

KW - Environmental Governance

KW - Sustainability Governance

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85161530556&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2023.102705

DO - 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2023.102705

M3 - Journal articles

C2 - 37829149

VL - 82

JO - Global Environmental Change : Human and Policy Dimensions

JF - Global Environmental Change : Human and Policy Dimensions

SN - 0959-3780

M1 - 102705

ER -

DOI

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