Becoming a Metagovernor: A Case Study of the Murray-Darling Basin Authority

P. Fawcett, Matthew Wood
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

The Murray-Darling Basin is Australia’s most important river system. It is home to over two million people, covers 14% of the country’s landmass and is of national significance socially, culturally, economically and environmentally. The governance network surrounding the Basin is complex involving multiple levels of governments (Commonwealth, state and territory) as well as numerous non-state actors, including individuals and communities living in the Basin, industry groups and environmentalists. The past three to four decades have seen increased levels of intergovernmental cooperation and coordination as nearly all actors have recognised the need for concerted action in order to avoid potentially catastrophic, long-term and irreversible environmental damage within the Basin. The decision to create the Murray Darling Basin Authority (MDBA) in September 2008 represented another step towards increased cooperation as it was the first time in Australian history that a dedicated Agency had been created with an explicit mandate to develop an integrated water management plan at the Basin level. This paper tracks ebbs and flows in the extent to which the MDBA was able to secure the political legitimacy that it required in order to successfully oversee the development of this Plan from the MDBA’s establishment in September 2008 through to the Plan’s commencement in November 2012. We analyse the MDBA’s capacity to develop political legitimacy during this time, which we conceptualise in terms of the cognitive, moral, and pragmatic legitimacy that the Agency was able to achieve within the wider community. We also show how the MDBA learned to become an effective metagovernor by shaping, developing and mending its political legitimacy. Thus, we are able to track how the MDBA was able to learn from its past failures at metagovernance. This article hence provides the first systematic empirical analysis of how delegated agencies can become effective metagovernors through direct attempts to foster their political legitimacy. More broadly, we conclude that to become effective (and to effectively become) metagovernors, organisations require stakeholders within and beyond the immediate governance network to accept their decisions (on whatever grounds) as appropriate and justified – i.e. legitimate – whilst also recognising that achieving such a status is more likely to be provisional, transitory and ephemeral, rather than lengthy, enduring and permanent. This is increasingly relevant, we argue, in late-modern societies where trust in elected or non-elected authorities is increasingly challenged.
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成为一个超级州长:墨累-达令盆地管理局的个案研究
墨累-达令盆地是澳大利亚最重要的河流系统。它是200多万人口的家园,占全国陆地面积的14%,在社会、文化、经济和环境方面具有全国意义。盆地周围的治理网络非常复杂,涉及多个级别的政府(联邦、州和地区)以及许多非国家行为体,包括生活在盆地的个人和社区、工业团体和环保主义者。过去三、四十年来,政府间合作和协调的水平有所提高,因为几乎所有行动者都认识到需要采取协调一致的行动,以避免盆地内潜在的灾难性、长期和不可逆转的环境破坏。2008年9月成立墨累达令流域管理局(MDBA)的决定代表着加强合作的又一步,因为这是澳大利亚历史上第一次成立一个专门的机构,明确授权在流域一级制定综合水资源管理计划。从2008年9月多边开发银行成立到2012年11月该计划启动,本文追踪了多边开发银行在多大程度上能够确保其所需的政治合法性,从而成功监督该计划的发展。我们分析了MDBA在这段时间内发展政治合法性的能力,我们从机构能够在更广泛的社区中实现的认知、道德和实用合法性的角度对其进行了概念化。我们还展示了MDBA如何通过塑造、发展和修补其政治合法性,学会成为一个有效的元管理者。因此,我们能够跟踪MDBA是如何从过去的元治理失败中学习的。因此,本文提供了第一个系统的实证分析,即授权机构如何通过直接尝试促进其政治合法性而成为有效的元管理者。更广泛地说,我们得出结论,要成为有效的(并有效地成为)元管理者,组织需要直接治理网络内外的利益相关者接受他们的决定(无论基于何种理由),认为这是适当和合理的——即合法的——同时也要认识到,实现这样的地位更可能是临时的、暂时的和短暂的,而不是漫长的、持久的和永久的。我们认为,在对民选或非民选当局的信任日益受到挑战的近代社会,这一点越来越重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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