The Political Economy of Cross-Scale Networks in Resource Co-Management
The Political Economy of Cross-Scale Networks in Resource Co-Management
Blog Article
We investigate linkages between stakeholders in resource management that occur at different spatial and institutional levels and identify the winners and losers in such interactions.So-called cross-scale interactions emerge because of the benefits to individual stakeholder groups in undertaking them or the high costs of not undertaking them.Hence there are uneven gains from cross-scale interactions that are themselves an integral part of social-ecological system governance.The political economy framework outlined here suggests that the determinants of the emergence Single Inlet 5 Way Water Valve of cross-scale interactions are the exercise of relative power between stakeholders and their costs of accessing and creating linkages.
Cross-scale interactions by powerful stakeholders have the potential to undermine trust in resource management arrangements.If government regulators, for example, mobilize information and resources from cross-level interactions to reinforce their authority, this often disempowers other stakeholders such as resource users.Offsetting such impacts, some cross-scale interactions can be empowering for local level user groups in creating social and political capital.These issues are illustrated with observations on resource management in a marine protected area in Tobago in the Caribbean.
The case study demonstrates that the structure of the cross-scale interplay, in terms of Yellow Dock relative winners and losers, determines its contribution to the resilience of social-ecological systems.