作为地下水治理社会资本的信息共享和外联活动

Joni S. Charles
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摘要

地下水的成功治理需要程序、人员和政策执行的协同配合。虽然其成功与否可以用预期结果来衡量,但这些结果能否持续则取决于这三个要素的相互作用。本文报告了对德克萨斯州地方地下水区主任和区经理的访谈结果,他们分别负责政策决策和政策实施。地下水治理的新范式认为,公众参与是一种社会资本,能带来更有效的地下水管理成果。本文的重点是通过从地下水管理专业人员和从业人员的角度介绍地下水管理和公众参与来检验这一范式。我对得克萨斯州的地下水管理人员和主管进行了 13 次访谈。通过对这些访谈进行定性分析,得出了三个主题。首先,地下水管理人员将与公众分享信息和专业知识视为一种公共服务,是对其专业角色的补充。其次,这种分享是一种非正式的、与当地经验和知识丰富的人进行的双向交流。这种双向交流建立在形成社会资本的社会网络之上,降低了管理人员执行政策的交易成本。第三,管理者无法控制的因素也会影响地下水管理的交易成本。地下水管理的交易成本包括协调用户活动和管理因地下水供需而产生的冲突或紧张关系。本文为有关社会资本对地下水管理重要性的文献做出了贡献。研究结果表明,用户、水井所有者和利益相关者群体的参与对于有效和高效的地下水管理和政策成果非常重要。
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Information Sharing and Outreach as Social Capital in Groundwater Governance
Successful governance of groundwater is process, people, and policy implementation working in tandem. While its success may be measured in desired outcomes, sustaining those outcomes depends on the interaction of these three elements. This paper reports the results of interviews conducted with local groundwater district Directors and district Managers in the state of Texas who make policy decisions and implement those policies, respectively. New paradigms of groundwater governance see public engagement as social capital that results in more effective groundwater management outcomes. The focus of this paper is to test this paradigm by presenting groundwater management and public engagement from the perspective of the professionals and practitioners in groundwater management. I conduct thirteen interviews with groundwater Managers and Directors in Texas. Three themes emerge from a qualitative analysis of these interviews. First, sharing Information and expertise with the public is seen as a public service by groundwater Managers that augments their professional roles. Second, this sharing is an informal, two-way exchange with those who have local experience and knowledge. The two-way exchange is built on social networks that form social capital, lowering the transaction cost of implementing policy by Managers. Third, factors beyond the control of Managers can also affect transaction costs of groundwater management. The transaction costs of groundwater management include coordinating user activity and managing the conflict or tensions that arise over groundwater supply and demand. This paper contributes to the literature on the importance of social capital to groundwater management. Results of the study illustrate the importance of user, well-owner, and stakeholder group engagement to effective and efficient groundwater management and policy outcomes.
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