4.6 Article

Opportunities and Barriers for Water Co-Governance-A Critical Analysis of Seven Cases of Diffuse Water Pollution from Agriculture in Europe, Australia and North America

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su10051634

Keywords

collaborative governance; decentralized decision-making; non-point source pollution; nutrient management; water governance

Funding

  1. DNMARK strategic research alliance - Danish Council for Strategic Research [12-132421]
  2. BONUS SOILS2SEA
  3. TRENDS
  4. MACSUR
  5. INTERREG project TOPSOIL
  6. INTERREG project Water CO-Governance
  7. HORIZON 2020 project FAIRWAY

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Diffuse Water Pollution from Agriculture (DWPA) and its governance has received increased attention as a policy concern across the globe. Mitigation of DWPA is a complex problem that requires a mix of policy instruments and a multi-agency, broad societal response. In this paper, opportunities and barriers for developing co-governance, defined as collaborative societal involvement in the functions of government, and its suitability for mitigation of DWPA are reviewed using seven case studies in Europe (Poland, Denmark, Sweden, The Netherlands and UK), Australia (Murray-Darling Basin) and North America (State of Minnesota). An analytical framework for assessing opportunities and barriers of co-governance was developed and applied in this review. Results indicated that five key issues constitute both opportunities and barriers, and include: (i) pressure for change; (ii) connected governance structures and allocation of resources and funding; (iii) leadership and establishment of partnerships through capacity building; (iv) use and co-production of knowledge; and (v) time commitment to develop water co-governance.

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