TY - GEN
T1 - Towards an art and science of decision aiding for water management and planning
T2 - 30th Hydrology and Water Resources Symposium: Past, Present and Future, HWRS 2006
AU - Daniell, Katherine A.
AU - White, Ian
AU - Ferrand, Nils
AU - Tsoukiàs, Alexis
AU - Burn, Stewart
AU - Perez, Pascal
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© HWRS 2006.
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - Planning and management of water resources are faced with increasingly high levels of complexity, uncertainty and conflict. Traditional technical and top-down management strategies have proved inadequate, forcing a move to more "integrated" forms of management, planning and decision making that can include stakeholders and communities, as well as technical experts and policy makers. These integrated forms of management require not only good technical or scientific ability, but a range of "art-like" skills including communication, creativity and the capacity to acknowledge and integrate diverse points of view. However, processes designed to aid such inter-organisational or multi-stakeholder decision-making are rare and in need of investigation. This paper proposes a process of "participatory modelling" using a series of semi-structured collective decision cycles which can aid decisions involving multiple stakeholders in water management and planning. The participatory modelling process outlined in this paper is designed to capture and integrate both tacit and explicit knowledge from stakeholders, right from the problem identification phase through to the final decision making, implementation and ongoing monitoring and evaluation. A brief idealised example of the participatory modelling process testing in Montpellier, France, is highlighted, as well as further questions and identified priority research areas.
AB - Planning and management of water resources are faced with increasingly high levels of complexity, uncertainty and conflict. Traditional technical and top-down management strategies have proved inadequate, forcing a move to more "integrated" forms of management, planning and decision making that can include stakeholders and communities, as well as technical experts and policy makers. These integrated forms of management require not only good technical or scientific ability, but a range of "art-like" skills including communication, creativity and the capacity to acknowledge and integrate diverse points of view. However, processes designed to aid such inter-organisational or multi-stakeholder decision-making are rare and in need of investigation. This paper proposes a process of "participatory modelling" using a series of semi-structured collective decision cycles which can aid decisions involving multiple stakeholders in water management and planning. The participatory modelling process outlined in this paper is designed to capture and integrate both tacit and explicit knowledge from stakeholders, right from the problem identification phase through to the final decision making, implementation and ongoing monitoring and evaluation. A brief idealised example of the participatory modelling process testing in Montpellier, France, is highlighted, as well as further questions and identified priority research areas.
KW - Decision aiding
KW - Multi-stakeholder
KW - Participatory modelling
KW - Planning
KW - Water management
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85091523849&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Conference contribution
T3 - 30th Hydrology and Water Resources Symposium, HWRS 2006
SP - 1
BT - 30th Hydrology and Water Resources Symposium, HWRS 2006
A2 - null, Conference Program Committee
PB - Engineers Australia
CY - Launceston Australia
Y2 - 4 December 2006 through 7 December 2006
ER -