| Full text | |
| Author(s): Show less - |
Trimble, Micaela
;
Olivier, Tomas
;
Anjos, Lidiane A. P.
;
Tadeu, Natalia Dias
;
Giordano, Gabriel
;
Mac Donnell, Lara
;
Laura, Rosana
;
Salvadores, Franco
;
Santana-Chaves, Igor Matheus
;
Torres, Pedro H. C.
;
Pascual, Miguel
;
Jacobi, Pedro R.
;
Mazzeo, Nestor
;
Zurbriggen, Cristina
;
Garrido, Lydia
;
Jobbagy, Esteban
;
Pahl-Wostl, Claudia
Total Authors: 17
|
| Document type: | Journal article |
| Source: | Ecology and Society; v. 27, n. 2, p. 14-pg., 2022-06-01. |
| Abstract | |
Adaptive water governance involves collaboration among multiple actors, social learning, and flexibility to deal with shocks and surprises. Crises thus become a useful context to assess how the institutional arrangements contribute to adaptation. However, an important part of the specialized literature has focused on these issues as they occur in highly institutionalized settings in the Global North. This paper, instead, analyzes basin organizations in settings with variable degrees of institutionalization in South America. The objective is to analyze the actions (or lack thereof) conducted or encouraged by basin committees in watersheds of Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay, in the face of water crises. We analyze three case studies, involving basin committees that faced different water crises (all affecting drinking water supply) at different scales: (1) Chubut River Basin committee and a turbidity crisis in the Lower Valley in 2017 (Chubut, Argentina), (2) Piracicaba-Capivari-Jundiai (PCJ) River Basins committee and a drought that occurred in 2014-2015 (Sao Paulo, Brazil), and (3) Laguna del Cisne Basin commission and a crisis associated with a failure in the water treatment operation in 2019 (Canelones, Uruguay). In each case, we analyze the institutional design of the committee and the actions (or lack thereof) undertaken regarding the crisis, including the perceptions of key stakeholders of those actions. Findings showed that stakeholders tend to act and communicate through fast channels when water crises occur, referring to basin committees only for technical and additional support (Brazil), information sharing (Uruguay), or not convening the committee at all (Argentina). Our cases in South American countries with different contexts provided empirical evidence of the barriers that basin committees face as political- institutional frameworks to foster adaptive water governance (e.g., limited stability, centralization, lack of leadership). (AU) | |
| FAPESP's process: | 15/03804-9 - Environmental governance of macrometropolis paulista in face of climate variability |
| Grantee: | Pedro Roberto Jacobi |
| Support Opportunities: | Research Program on Global Climate Change - Thematic Grants |
| FAPESP's process: | 18/06685-9 - New means of scientific cooperation for innovation in the Socio-environmental Governance of the Macrometropole Paulista |
| Grantee: | Pedro Henrique Campello Torres |
| Support Opportunities: | Scholarships in Brazil - Post-Doctoral |