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Adaptive Comanagement in the Venice Lagoon? An Analysis of Current Water and Environmental Management Practices and Prospects for Change

Adaptive Comanagement in the Venice Lagoon? An Analysis of Current Water and Environmental... Copyright © 2012 by the author(s). Published here under license by the Resilience Alliance. Munaretto, S., and D. Huitema. 2012. Adaptive comanagement in the Venice lagoon? An analysis of current water and environmental management practices and prospects for change. Ecology and Society 17 (2): 19. http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-04772-170219 Research Adaptive Comanagement in the Venice Lagoon? An Analysis of Current Water and Environmental Management Practices and Prospects for Change 1,2 2 Stefania Munaretto and Dave Huitema ABSTRACT. Adaptive comanagement (ACM) is often suggested as a way of handling the modern challenges of environmental governance, which include uncertainty and complexity. ACM is a novel combination of the learning dimension of adaptive management and the linkage dimension of comanagement. As has been suggested, there is a need for more insight on enabling policy environments for ACM success and failure. Picking up on this agenda we provide a case study of the world famous Venice lagoon in Italy. We address the following questions: first, to what extent are four institutional prescriptions typically associated with ACM currently practiced in the Venice system? Second, to what extent is learning taking place in the Venice system? Third, how is learning related to the implementation or nonimplementation of the http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Ecology and Society Unpaywall

Adaptive Comanagement in the Venice Lagoon? An Analysis of Current Water and Environmental Management Practices and Prospects for Change

Ecology and SocietyJan 1, 2012
16 pages

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Publisher
Unpaywall
ISSN
1708-3087
DOI
10.5751/es-04772-170219
Publisher site
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Abstract

Copyright © 2012 by the author(s). Published here under license by the Resilience Alliance. Munaretto, S., and D. Huitema. 2012. Adaptive comanagement in the Venice lagoon? An analysis of current water and environmental management practices and prospects for change. Ecology and Society 17 (2): 19. http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-04772-170219 Research Adaptive Comanagement in the Venice Lagoon? An Analysis of Current Water and Environmental Management Practices and Prospects for Change 1,2 2 Stefania Munaretto and Dave Huitema ABSTRACT. Adaptive comanagement (ACM) is often suggested as a way of handling the modern challenges of environmental governance, which include uncertainty and complexity. ACM is a novel combination of the learning dimension of adaptive management and the linkage dimension of comanagement. As has been suggested, there is a need for more insight on enabling policy environments for ACM success and failure. Picking up on this agenda we provide a case study of the world famous Venice lagoon in Italy. We address the following questions: first, to what extent are four institutional prescriptions typically associated with ACM currently practiced in the Venice system? Second, to what extent is learning taking place in the Venice system? Third, how is learning related to the implementation or nonimplementation of the

Journal

Ecology and SocietyUnpaywall

Published: Jan 1, 2012

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