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9781597264754: Wicked Environmental Problems: Managing Uncertainty and Conflict

Sinossi

"Wicked" problems are large-scale, long-term policy dilemmas in which multiple and compounding risks and uncertainties combine with sharply divergent public values to generate contentious political stalemates; wicked problems in the environmental arena typically emerge from entrenched conflicts over natural resource management and over the prioritization of economic and conservation goals more generally.

This new book examines past experience and future directions in the management of wicked environmental problems and describes new strategies for mitigating the conflicts inherent in these seemingly intractable situations. The book:
  • reviews the history of the concept of wicked problems
  • examines the principles and processes that managers have applied
  • explores the practical limitations of various approaches
Most important, the book reviews current thinking on the way forward, focusing on the implementation of "learning networks," in which public managers, technical experts, and public stakeholders collaborate in decision-making processes that are analytic, iterative, and deliberative.

Case studies of forest management in the Sierra Nevada, restoration of the Florida Everglades, carbon trading in the European Union, and management of the Ngorongoro Conservation Area in Tanzania are used to explain concepts and demonstrate practical applications.

Wicked Environmental Problems offers new approaches for managing environmental conflicts and shows how managers could apply these approaches within common, real-world statutory decision-making frameworks. It is essential reading for anyone concerned with managing environmental problems.

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Informazioni sull?autore

Peter J. Balint is an associate professor of environmental policy in the Department of Public and International Affairs, George Mason University, in Fairfax, Virginia.

Ronald E. Stewart, now retired, spent 30 years with the USDA Forest Service, ending his career as Deputy Chief for Programs and Legislation before serving five years on the faculty of Department of Environmental Science and Policy, George Mason University.

Anand Desai is a Professor at the John Glenn School of Public Affairs at the Ohio State University, in Columbus.

Lawrence C. Walters is Stewart Grow Professor of Public Policy and Management in the Romney Institute, Brigham Young University, in Provo, Utah.

Estratto. © Ristampato con autorizzazione. Tutti i diritti riservati.

Wicked Environmental Problems

Managing Uncertainty and Conflict

By Peter J. Balint, Ronald E. Stewart, Anand Desai, Lawrence C. Walters

ISLAND PRESS

Copyright © 2011 Island Press
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-59726-475-4

Contents

About Island Press,
Title Page,
Copyright Page,
PREFACE,
Chapter 1 - The Challenge of Wicked Problems,
Chapter 2 - Risk and Uncertainty in Environmental Management,
Chapter 3 - Four Wicked Cases,
Chapter 4 - The Precautionary Principle,
Chapter 5 - Adaptive Management,
Chapter 6 - Participatory Processes,
Chapter 7 - A Proposed Adaptive, Deliberative Decision Process,
Chapter 8 - The Sierra Nevada Example: Survey of Stakeholders,
Chapter 9 - The Sierra Nevada Example: Elicitation and Analysis of Preferences,
Chapter 10 - Managing Wicked Environmental Problems,
REFERENCES,
AUTHORS,
INDEX,
Island Press |Board of Directors,


CHAPTER 1

The Challenge of Wicked Problems


For almost a century, advocates for preservation and for development have argued about the effects of human actions on the environment. These arguments have been made more difficult to resolve because there are still considerable uncertainties in science, and because it takes a long time for the effects of human actions to show up in the environment. Both sides, and other groups who fall along a continuum between them, have exploited these uncertainties in appeals and litigation. The logical result was for government agencies to produce more complex documents justifying their decisions and to include and advocate for more science, causing many to assume these disputes were based in science. But we believe the evidence shows that the underlying differences in stakeholder positions are not so much related to uncertainties in science or failure to consider particular aspects of the scientific literature, but rather to conflicting values and preferences, and therefore differing views on desirable outcomes. These elements of the argument are rarely, if ever, considered in the decision-making process. As a result, most environmental arguments continue to produce more detailed documents and longer processes without resolving the underlying issues.


Wicked Problems

The clashing interests of environmentalists, developers, and others have elevated many environmental problems that require decisions at the federal and state level from simple, to complex, to "wicked" (Salwasser 2004; Lackey 2007). A wicked problem is characterized by a high degree of scientific uncertainty and deep disagreement on values (Allen and Gould 1986; Committee of Scientists 1999). The definition of a wicked environmental problem itself is in the eye of the beholder, or the stakeholder, and therefore there is no single correct formulation of any particular problem (Rittel and Webber 1973; Allen and Gould 1986). Consequently, there is no single, correct, optimal solution. The decision maker must come to a conclusion without knowing if all feasible and desirable options have been explored, and any management choice will ultimately be better or worse rather than true or false.

In this book, we examine the class of wicked problems, including proper identification of such problems and how they have been dealt with in the past. We propose a modified decision-making approach that blends current thinking on addressing wicked problems and stakeholder participation with our understanding of the best practices already implemented by agencies to address such problems. Our approach relies on developing a learning networkamong the stakeholders, using an adaptive, iterative, deliberative, analytical participatory process. An important component of this method is incorporating stakeholder preferences into the ecological models that resource management agencies currently use to support decision making. We also suggest that since wicked problems have no single best solution, decision makers must seek management policies and processes that are "satisficing"—that is, potentially broadly acceptable and implementable—rather than optimal. Herbert Simon (1957) coined the term satisfice, combining the words "satisfy" and "suffice." A satisficing strategy accepts an outcome or judgment as good enough or satisfactory without an expectation that it is in any sense optimal or best.

In this book we also touch on the important consequences of properly or improperly identifying a wicked problem. Not all problems rise to the level of wicked, but when they do, the processes used become critical. Although environmental dilemmas may occasionally meet the criteria for wicked problems, such problems are by no means confined to the environment. Whenever interest groups with strongly divergent values are well organized and highly motivated, and uncertainties in the science may be exploited, an issue can move into the realm of a wicked problem.


Historical Perspective of Environmental Controversy

In this book, we introduce and discuss case studies of wicked environmental problems in the United States, Europe, and Africa. Our key case study, however, focuses on national forest management in the Sierra Nevada region of California. In presenting a brief summary of political conflicts over the environment in this section, we emphasize the origins of these disputes in the context of public lands in the western United States. While the details of the social and historical trends leading to environmental conflict differ across our case studies, there are also, as we discuss in the book, significant common factors, including, most importantly, scientific uncertainty and profound differences in perceptions, attitudes, and values among key stakeholders.

From today's perspective, many view the age of environmental controversy as beginning in the 1960s. However, the battle over environmental management among prodevelopment, propreservation, and other interest groups in the United States has a history more than a century long. Unfortunately, the resulting political compromises have not addressed the fundamental and underlying differences in public values represented by these positions. Because these value differences were not taken into consideration, stakeholders have continued to press their arguments through the courts using the laws passed in the 1960s and 1970s that opened the federal and state decision-making processes to public participation.

The US environmental movement had its roots in battles over the public domain in the western part of the country. The initial philosophy of Congress and the federal government during the mid- to late 1800s was to encourage settlement and development by disposal of these lands to railroads, farmers, and others. Various acts of Congress encouraged mining and oil production to meet the needs of a growing population and economy. However, a significant change in attitude toward the remaining public lands began to emerge in the last quarter of the nineteenth century. Publication of the Report Upon Forestry (Hough 1878) and meetings of the American Forestry Association demonstrated a growing concern about the overharvesting of forests and overgrazing of public lands. The establishment of Yellowstone, the first national park, on March 1, 1872, and passage of the Forest Reserve Act of 1891 signaled the end of disposal to private interests and the beginning of federal ownership for protection of natural resources. The Forest Reserve Act allowed the president of the United States to designate forest reserves. Lands so designated were protected from disposal, but the act did not include any administrative authority for the use of those lands (Steen 1992). However, concerns about loss of development potential for local communities resulted in pressure by western members of Congress to allow timber harvesting and grazing, leading in turn to passage of the Organic Act of 1897. The Organic Act provided for watershed protection and included an implied goal of long-term sustainability for the nation's natural resources. This compromise earned initial support for setting aside additional forest reserves among members of Congress from both the western and eastern areas of the country.

This compromise was short-lived, however. In 1907, western interests moved to block the president's authority to establish forest reserves through the annual agricultural appropriation bill (Steen 1992). The catalysts for this action were a series of land fraud trials in Oregon and President Theodore Roosevelt's aggressive establishment of new reserves. With this act, the authority to establish additional reserves resided exclusively with Congress. Roosevelt, with the help of the first chief of the US Forest Service, Gifford Pinchot, moved quickly to establish an additional sixteen million acres of reserves before the law took effect (Steen 1992). The bill also changed the name from "forest reserves" to "national forests."

With the rise in power of the organized environmental movement in the 1960s and the passage of both state and federal legislation that opened up the decision-making process to public review and gave citizens the right to sue the government, the site for environmental battles came to include the courts as well as Congress and the state legislatures. The National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, Endangered Species Act of 1973, Clean Air Act of 1970, Clean Water Act of 1972, and other statutes required that federal decisions affecting the environment must be open to public involvement. Provisions for citizens and environmental groups to litigate over decisions that they did not support were also provided. Most states followed suit with similar laws and regulations.

These environmental laws also required that decisions be accompanied by detailed comprehensive analyses of alternatives and their potential impacts (environmental impact statements) and written documentation of the decision and its justification (the formal record of decision or finding of no significant impact). All these documents were subject to public review and comment, and the agencies were required to explain how they responded to that input. Because government agencies are delegated the responsibility to make decisions by law, opponents of a decision must base their legal arguments on procedural deficiencies or failures to comply with specific requirements of law or agency regulations. Procedural deficiencies may include inadequate public involvement, failure to adequately consider other alternatives, failure to adequately consider public input, or failure to consider or properly interpret science. Successful litigation on these issues has prompted agencies to create lengthier, more complex, and more analytical documents in an attempt to address these potential grounds for lawsuits. This in turn has resulted in more protracted and involved public participation processes. Since this process ultimately does not address the fundamental underlying issues—disagreement over values and dissatisfaction with the decision itself—it often results in continuing litigation and in a cycle of decisions that cannot be implemented.


Overview of the Book

Here we briefly summarize the focus of each of the remaining chapters. Chapter 2 formally introduces the concept of wicked problems. In this chapter we describe the characteristics of wicked problems, and discuss the ways uncertainty, risk, divergent values, and other factors contribute to the wickedness of these problems.

Chapter 3 presents the four case studies that serve as examples throughout the book. The first three sections of the chapter examine problems associated with efforts to restore the Everglades in Florida, manage the Ngorongoro Conservation Area in Tanzania, and implement a cap-and-trade program for carbon dioxide emissions in the European Union. The fourth section introduces our primary case study—the problems associated with managing the Sierra Nevada national forests of California. Through these diverse cases, we illustrate that the concept of wicked problems has broad applicability across a variety of natural resource management dilemmas in both developed and developing countries. The discussion of the four cases highlights both the characteristics that these dilemmas have in common and the challenging idiosyncrasies that make them resistant to generalized policy responses.

Chapters 4 through 6 examine ways managers have commonly attempted to address these kinds of complex dilemmas, whether or not they explicitly understood that they were facing a wicked problem. Chapter 4 focuses on the precautionary principle, which advocates proactive efforts to anticipate and reduce the likelihood of future harms. Chapter 5 discusses adaptive management, which incorporates an acceptance of limits to current knowledge and applies systematic efforts to promote learning from carefully designed and monitored management experiments. In these chapters, we also consider ways in which the precautionary principle and adaptive management may conflict with each other. In chapter 6, we describe the role of public participation in managing complex environmental problems. This approach, an essential component of modern democratic processes, is now widely required by law. It also provides a clear avenue for the expression and inclusion of diverse public values in the policy process. In our discussion, we also consider common challenges that may limit the effectiveness and efficiency of participatory processes.

In chapter 7, we recommend an approach designed to incorporate and improve on the decision principles and processes used to date in the context of wicked problems. Our recommended approach builds on the learning network process proposed in the literature (National Research Council 1996), incorporates the procedural requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act, and adds novel methods for formally eliciting and analyzing public values.

In chapters 8 and 9, we describe the results of a pilot test of our proposed analytic methods in the context of the Sierra Nevada case study. During our research to gather information on stakeholder attitudes and preferences, we held three workshops in the region. During these meetings, we asked participants to complete a questionnaire on their perceptions of the decision process and a card-sort exercise in which they could consider and rank various policy alternatives. In chapter 8 we report the results of the questionnaire, and in chapter 9 we describe our analysis and findings from the card-sort exercise.

Finally, in chapter 10 we summarize our views on how decision makers and managers might best cope with wicked problems. While acknowledging that not all problems are wicked, we emphasize that the appropriate identification of a problem as wicked can itself be useful for the public manager. This identification has important consequences. For example, since a wicked problem has no optimal solution, the manager—while still required to act—is released from the impossible task of finding the one correct response. Given the idiosyncratic diversity and apparent intractability of wicked problems, we do not claim that our approach can transform wicked problems into tame ones or that it will fit all circumstances as a fixed template. But we believe our proposal has the potential to facilitate progress and may usefully be adapted to match the varying contexts of wicked problems.

CHAPTER 2

Risk and Uncertainty in Environmental Management

When it comes to environmental conflict, what makes some decisions more difficult than others? For example, the state of California routinely experiences thousands of wildfires each year, hundreds of which are the natural result of lightning strikes. If these naturally occurring phenomena are so common, what makes decisions related to the management of these situations so challenging?

Similarly, there had been an apparent consensus regarding development strategies in the Everglades in Florida; however, as regular flooding and polluted streams indicate, those strategies are not sustainable. And yet, there appears to be no agreement between those who favor preservation and those in favor of development on alternative solutions. How do situations that are used to derive a consensus on how to address the situation suddenly become a source of contention?

Such intractable problems are not unique to the United States. The European Union has been able to make little headway toward implementing market strategies to reduce carbon dioxide emissions that seem to have worked, at least partially, in the United States. Likewise, in Tanzania government agencies have yet to create a clear path to balancing the competing needs of a homeland for the Maasai, wildlife preservation, and tourism revenues.

To appreciate how these and similar worldwide decisions differ qualitatively, we must first review traditional approaches to problem structuring and decision making, particularly in the analysis of public problems. This process of evaluating and choosing from alternatives is often iterative, but there are relatively well-defined, sequential steps that analysts employ in developing an effective public policy (Kweit and Kweit 1987; Patton and Sawicki 1993; Dunn 1994; Bardach 1996; McRae and Whittington 1997; Walters, Aydelotte, and Miller 2000).

1. Define the problem.

2. Identify the criteria to be used in evaluating alternative solutions.

3. Generate alternative solutions to the problem.

4. Evaluate the alternative solutions based on the evaluation criteria.

5. Recommend an alternative.


Even practical approaches to improved individual decision making often parallel these steps (Hammond, Keeney, and Raiffa 1999). How well this general approach will work depends in part on the nature of the issue at hand. Several authors have pointed out that the structure of public problems can be characterized along several dimensions. Walters, Aydelotte, and Miller (2000) offer the following list of factors to help predict how serious a given problem is.


(Continues...)
Excerpted from Wicked Environmental Problems by Peter J. Balint, Ronald E. Stewart, Anand Desai, Lawrence C. Walters. Copyright © 2011 Island Press. Excerpted by permission of ISLAND PRESS.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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  • EditoreIsland Pr
  • Data di pubblicazione2011
  • ISBN 10 159726475X
  • ISBN 13 9781597264754
  • RilegaturaCopertina flessibile
  • LinguaInglese
  • Numero edizione1
  • Numero di pagine253
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