Stakeholder engagement and knowledge co-creation in water planning: can public participation increase cost-effectiveness?

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Stakeholder engagement and knowledge co-creation in water planning : can public participation increase cost-effectiveness? / Graversgaard, Morten; Jacobsen, Brian H.; Kjeldsen, Chris; Dalgaard, Tommy.

In: Water (Switzerland), Vol. 9, No. 3, 191, 2017.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Graversgaard, M, Jacobsen, BH, Kjeldsen, C & Dalgaard, T 2017, 'Stakeholder engagement and knowledge co-creation in water planning: can public participation increase cost-effectiveness?', Water (Switzerland), vol. 9, no. 3, 191. https://doi.org/10.3390/w9030191

APA

Graversgaard, M., Jacobsen, B. H., Kjeldsen, C., & Dalgaard, T. (2017). Stakeholder engagement and knowledge co-creation in water planning: can public participation increase cost-effectiveness? Water (Switzerland), 9(3), [191]. https://doi.org/10.3390/w9030191

Vancouver

Graversgaard M, Jacobsen BH, Kjeldsen C, Dalgaard T. Stakeholder engagement and knowledge co-creation in water planning: can public participation increase cost-effectiveness? Water (Switzerland). 2017;9(3). 191. https://doi.org/10.3390/w9030191

Author

Graversgaard, Morten ; Jacobsen, Brian H. ; Kjeldsen, Chris ; Dalgaard, Tommy. / Stakeholder engagement and knowledge co-creation in water planning : can public participation increase cost-effectiveness?. In: Water (Switzerland). 2017 ; Vol. 9, No. 3.

Bibtex

@article{ad33b095e3a74d9ebe334b9e6ce3166a,
title = "Stakeholder engagement and knowledge co-creation in water planning: can public participation increase cost-effectiveness?",
abstract = "In 2014, a radical shift took place in Danish water planning. Following years of a top-down water planning approach, 23 regional water councils were established to co-create and provide input to Danish authorities on the development of River Basin Management Plans (RBMP). The water councils advised local authorities on the application of measures to improve the physical conditions in Danish streams within a given economic frame. The paper shows the difference the use of water councils (public participation) made by comparing the final water council proposal included in the 2015 RBMP to the RBMPs proposed by the central government (Nature Agency) in 2014. The study concludes that the measures proposed by the water councils will generally deliver better results than the proposed Nature Agency plans, which do not include the same level of participation. Specifically, the water councils with stakeholder involvement proposed a much longer network of streams (3800 km), yielding a better ecological outcome than the shorter stream network (1615 km) proposed by the Nature Agency for the same budget. Having a structured and fixed institutional frame around public participation (top-down meeting bottom-up) can produce cost-effective results, but the results show that cost-effectiveness was not the only deciding factor, and that local circumstances like the practicalities of implementing the measures were also considered when developing the Programmes of Measures. The findings suggest that the use of water councils in water planning has significant advantages, including the fact that the knowledge of local conditions helps to identify efficient solutions at lower costs, which can be useful for administrators, policy-makers, and other stakeholders implementing theWater Framework Directive in years to come.",
keywords = "Bottom-up and top-down, Collaborative water governance, Cost-effectiveness analysis, Environmental decision-making, Outcomes, Stakeholder involvement, Water councils, Water Framework Directive",
author = "Morten Graversgaard and Jacobsen, {Brian H.} and Chris Kjeldsen and Tommy Dalgaard",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.3390/w9030191",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "Water",
issn = "2073-4441",
publisher = "M D P I AG",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Stakeholder engagement and knowledge co-creation in water planning

T2 - can public participation increase cost-effectiveness?

AU - Graversgaard, Morten

AU - Jacobsen, Brian H.

AU - Kjeldsen, Chris

AU - Dalgaard, Tommy

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - In 2014, a radical shift took place in Danish water planning. Following years of a top-down water planning approach, 23 regional water councils were established to co-create and provide input to Danish authorities on the development of River Basin Management Plans (RBMP). The water councils advised local authorities on the application of measures to improve the physical conditions in Danish streams within a given economic frame. The paper shows the difference the use of water councils (public participation) made by comparing the final water council proposal included in the 2015 RBMP to the RBMPs proposed by the central government (Nature Agency) in 2014. The study concludes that the measures proposed by the water councils will generally deliver better results than the proposed Nature Agency plans, which do not include the same level of participation. Specifically, the water councils with stakeholder involvement proposed a much longer network of streams (3800 km), yielding a better ecological outcome than the shorter stream network (1615 km) proposed by the Nature Agency for the same budget. Having a structured and fixed institutional frame around public participation (top-down meeting bottom-up) can produce cost-effective results, but the results show that cost-effectiveness was not the only deciding factor, and that local circumstances like the practicalities of implementing the measures were also considered when developing the Programmes of Measures. The findings suggest that the use of water councils in water planning has significant advantages, including the fact that the knowledge of local conditions helps to identify efficient solutions at lower costs, which can be useful for administrators, policy-makers, and other stakeholders implementing theWater Framework Directive in years to come.

AB - In 2014, a radical shift took place in Danish water planning. Following years of a top-down water planning approach, 23 regional water councils were established to co-create and provide input to Danish authorities on the development of River Basin Management Plans (RBMP). The water councils advised local authorities on the application of measures to improve the physical conditions in Danish streams within a given economic frame. The paper shows the difference the use of water councils (public participation) made by comparing the final water council proposal included in the 2015 RBMP to the RBMPs proposed by the central government (Nature Agency) in 2014. The study concludes that the measures proposed by the water councils will generally deliver better results than the proposed Nature Agency plans, which do not include the same level of participation. Specifically, the water councils with stakeholder involvement proposed a much longer network of streams (3800 km), yielding a better ecological outcome than the shorter stream network (1615 km) proposed by the Nature Agency for the same budget. Having a structured and fixed institutional frame around public participation (top-down meeting bottom-up) can produce cost-effective results, but the results show that cost-effectiveness was not the only deciding factor, and that local circumstances like the practicalities of implementing the measures were also considered when developing the Programmes of Measures. The findings suggest that the use of water councils in water planning has significant advantages, including the fact that the knowledge of local conditions helps to identify efficient solutions at lower costs, which can be useful for administrators, policy-makers, and other stakeholders implementing theWater Framework Directive in years to come.

KW - Bottom-up and top-down

KW - Collaborative water governance

KW - Cost-effectiveness analysis

KW - Environmental decision-making

KW - Outcomes

KW - Stakeholder involvement

KW - Water councils

KW - Water Framework Directive

U2 - 10.3390/w9030191

DO - 10.3390/w9030191

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85014881766

VL - 9

JO - Water

JF - Water

SN - 2073-4441

IS - 3

M1 - 191

ER -

ID: 183327827