Governing landscapes: An agenda for the assessment of grasslands and savannahs

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Governing landscapes : An agenda for the assessment of grasslands and savannahs. / Eufemia, Luca; Wawrzynowicz, Ingrid; Bonatti, Michelle et al.

In: Frontiers in Sustainable Resource Management, Vol. 2, 1134393, 09.03.2023.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearch

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Eufemia L, Wawrzynowicz I, Bonatti M, Partelow S, Fischer J, Sieber S. Governing landscapes: An agenda for the assessment of grasslands and savannahs. Frontiers in Sustainable Resource Management. 2023 Mar 9;2:1134393. doi: 10.3389/fsrma.2023.1134393

Bibtex

@article{676e234aebc04474b16291775fc486ad,
title = "Governing landscapes: An agenda for the assessment of grasslands and savannahs",
abstract = "In this article, we propose an agenda promoting the development of a new integrated assessment toolkit (theory-based toolkit) of environmental governance in overlooked ecosystems of grasslands and savannahs in the Global South. To explore the complexity of social-ecological and governance systems, a growing number of systems-thinking approaches provide academics/practitioners with numerous analytical frameworks, theories, and methodologies that are potentially useful for unveiling institutional aspects along with their causal variables for the access, use and management of natural resources. Yet, we argue that achieving a comprehensive understanding of environmental governance systems only by using one single framework or theory is limiting. Further, there is a growing need of more social science knowledge and grassland and savannah context-specific frameworks that are tailored and applicable to policy settings. Therefore, by building on the five approaches of the political ecological framework of community-based governance (CBG) relating to key environmental governance frameworks, such as the community-based natural resource management (CBNRM) and the institutional and development framework (IAD), we propose a theory-based toolkit that would review, synthesize, connect, relate and test multiple core principles in a way that more fully accounts for social-ecological interactions in focal ecosystems. We are convinced that future empirical analysis/research following our agenda and the toolkit approach can generate hypotheses that are testable in real-life contexts. To this end, we suggest guiding research questions, research methods, as well as comparable cases and their rationales.",
keywords = "Environmental planning, Environmental Governance, Biology",
author = "Luca Eufemia and Ingrid Wawrzynowicz and Michelle Bonatti and Stefan Partelow and Joern Fischer and Stefan Sieber",
year = "2023",
month = mar,
day = "9",
doi = "10.3389/fsrma.2023.1134393",
language = "English",
volume = "2",
journal = "Frontiers in Sustainable Resource Management",
issn = "2813-3005",
publisher = "Frontiers Research Foundation",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Governing landscapes

T2 - An agenda for the assessment of grasslands and savannahs

AU - Eufemia, Luca

AU - Wawrzynowicz, Ingrid

AU - Bonatti, Michelle

AU - Partelow, Stefan

AU - Fischer, Joern

AU - Sieber, Stefan

PY - 2023/3/9

Y1 - 2023/3/9

N2 - In this article, we propose an agenda promoting the development of a new integrated assessment toolkit (theory-based toolkit) of environmental governance in overlooked ecosystems of grasslands and savannahs in the Global South. To explore the complexity of social-ecological and governance systems, a growing number of systems-thinking approaches provide academics/practitioners with numerous analytical frameworks, theories, and methodologies that are potentially useful for unveiling institutional aspects along with their causal variables for the access, use and management of natural resources. Yet, we argue that achieving a comprehensive understanding of environmental governance systems only by using one single framework or theory is limiting. Further, there is a growing need of more social science knowledge and grassland and savannah context-specific frameworks that are tailored and applicable to policy settings. Therefore, by building on the five approaches of the political ecological framework of community-based governance (CBG) relating to key environmental governance frameworks, such as the community-based natural resource management (CBNRM) and the institutional and development framework (IAD), we propose a theory-based toolkit that would review, synthesize, connect, relate and test multiple core principles in a way that more fully accounts for social-ecological interactions in focal ecosystems. We are convinced that future empirical analysis/research following our agenda and the toolkit approach can generate hypotheses that are testable in real-life contexts. To this end, we suggest guiding research questions, research methods, as well as comparable cases and their rationales.

AB - In this article, we propose an agenda promoting the development of a new integrated assessment toolkit (theory-based toolkit) of environmental governance in overlooked ecosystems of grasslands and savannahs in the Global South. To explore the complexity of social-ecological and governance systems, a growing number of systems-thinking approaches provide academics/practitioners with numerous analytical frameworks, theories, and methodologies that are potentially useful for unveiling institutional aspects along with their causal variables for the access, use and management of natural resources. Yet, we argue that achieving a comprehensive understanding of environmental governance systems only by using one single framework or theory is limiting. Further, there is a growing need of more social science knowledge and grassland and savannah context-specific frameworks that are tailored and applicable to policy settings. Therefore, by building on the five approaches of the political ecological framework of community-based governance (CBG) relating to key environmental governance frameworks, such as the community-based natural resource management (CBNRM) and the institutional and development framework (IAD), we propose a theory-based toolkit that would review, synthesize, connect, relate and test multiple core principles in a way that more fully accounts for social-ecological interactions in focal ecosystems. We are convinced that future empirical analysis/research following our agenda and the toolkit approach can generate hypotheses that are testable in real-life contexts. To this end, we suggest guiding research questions, research methods, as well as comparable cases and their rationales.

KW - Environmental planning

KW - Environmental Governance

KW - Biology

U2 - 10.3389/fsrma.2023.1134393

DO - 10.3389/fsrma.2023.1134393

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 2

JO - Frontiers in Sustainable Resource Management

JF - Frontiers in Sustainable Resource Management

SN - 2813-3005

M1 - 1134393

ER -

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