Thursday, May 31, 2018

Does information on the interdependence of climate adaptation measures stimulate collaboration?



As a final result of the ECOMPRIS project, a paper has been published in Regional Environmental change. It is the result of an interdisciplinary collaboration between Merel van der Wal, Paul Opdam, Ingrid Coninx, Eveline Steingröver, Sven Stremke and myself, led by Claire Vos.

Does information on the interdependence of climate adaptation measures stimulate collaboration? A case study analysis


A key issue in implementing adaptation strategies at the landscape level is that landowners take measures on their land collectively. We explored the role of information in collective decision-making in a landscape planning process in the Baakse Beek region, the Netherlands. Information was provided on (a) the degree to which measures contribute to multiple purposes, (b) whether they are beneficial to stakeholders representing different sectors of land use, and (c) the need for landscape-level implementation of adaptation measures. Our analysis suggests that the negotiation process resulted in collective decisions for more collaborative adaptation measures than could be expected from individual preferences previous to the planning session. Based on the results, it is plausible that the provided information enhanced integrative agreements by leading stakeholders to realize that they were mutually interdependent, both in acquiring individual benefits as well as in implementing the measures at the landscape level. Our findings are significant in the context of the emerging insight that targeted information provision for climate adaptation of landscapes can support collaboration between the relevant stakeholders.

The paper is published Open Access and is freely available at https://doi.org/10.1007/s10113-018-1306-x