A theory of participation: what makes stakeholder and public engagement in environmental management work?

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenÜbersichtsarbeitenForschung

Authors

  • Mark S. Reed
  • Steven Vella
  • Edward Challies
  • Joris de Vente
  • Lynne Frewer
  • Daniela Hohenwallner-Ries
  • Tobias Huber
  • Rosmarie K. Neumann
  • Elizabeth A. Oughton
  • Julian Sidoli del Ceno
  • Hedwig van Delden

This article differentiates between descriptive and explanatory factors to develop a typology and a theory of stakeholder and public engagement. The typology describes different types of public and stakeholder engagement, and the theory comprises four factors that explain much of the variation in outcomes (for the natural environment and/or for participants) between different types of engagement. First, we use a narrative literature search to develop a new typology of stakeholder and public engagement based on agency (who initiates and leads engagement) and mode of engagement (from communication to coproduction). We then propose a theory to explain the variation in outcomes from different types of engagement: (1) a number of socioeconomic, cultural, and institutional contextual factors influence the outcomes of engagement; (2) there are a number of process design factors that can increase the likelihood that engagement leads to desired outcomes, across a wide range of sociocultural, political, economic, and biophysical contexts; (3) the effectiveness of engagement is significantly influenced by power dynamics, the values of participants, and their epistemologies, that is, the way they construct knowledge and which types of knowledge they consider valid; and (4) engagement processes work differently and can lead to different outcomes when they operate over different spatial and temporal scales. We use the theoretical framework to provide practical guidance for those designing engagement processes, arguing that a theoretically informed approach to stakeholder and public engagement has the potential to markedly improve the outcomes of environmental decision-making processes.

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ZeitschriftRestoration Ecology
Jahrgang26
AusgabenummerS1
Seiten (von - bis)S7-S17
Anzahl der Seiten11
ISSN1061-2971
DOIs
PublikationsstatusErschienen - 01.04.2018

Bibliographische Notiz

Funding Information:
Thanks to two anonymous reviewers, D. Walker and J. Swart, for suggestions that improved the manuscript. M.S.R., S.V., E.A.O., and H.V.D. are funded by the SOILCARE project, which has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under grant agreement no 677407. M.S.R. is a Chief Operating Officer of Fast Track Impact, a training company that is changing how researchers generate and share knowledge, so their ideas can change the world.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Society for Ecological Restoration

DOI