Social and Biophysical Context Influences County-level Support for Collaborative Watershed Restoration: Case Study of the Sacramento River, CA, USA
Autor: | Suzanne Langridge |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
education.field_of_study
Watershed Land use Flood myth business.industry 05 social sciences Environmental resource management Population 010501 environmental sciences 01 natural sciences 0506 political science Watershed management Flood control Geography 050602 political science & public administration Collaborative governance business education Recreation 0105 earth and related environmental sciences Nature and Landscape Conservation |
Zdroj: | Ecological Restoration. 34:285-296 |
ISSN: | 1543-4079 1543-4060 |
DOI: | 10.3368/er.34.4.285 |
Popis: | Collaborative watershed management is an increasingly common practice with the potential to be more effective than top-down approaches. One critical issue I investigate here is regional differences in collaborative governance context, process, and outcomes within large-scale collaborative watershed restoration. Using interviews, document review, direct observation, and analysis of employment, population, voting, and land use data, I examine differences in socioeconomic, political, and biophysical context among four counties in California, US within a large-scale collaborative watershed restoration project. I relate these factors to differences in collaborative processes and environmental and social outcomes. The four rural agricultural-based counties had different socioeconomic and biophysical concerns associated with large-scale restoration. Flood risk, type of agriculture, and local advocacy organizations emerged as important factors influencing support for collaborative restoration within the watershed. Although individual farmers in all four counties sold their land to restoration practitioners in similar proportions, there were differences in area restored among the counties. Only 3% of the purchased properties were restored in the county with the highest level of irrigated cropland and highest flood risk, while 26–38% of the purchased properties were restored in the other three counties. Multi-benefit projects that target issues important to the community (i.e., recreation or flood control) can reduce opposition as can mitigation and minimization of negative effects of restoration on crops, and co-developing knowledge with stakeholders. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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