Social Learning for Collaborative Natural Resource Management
Louisiana Department of Natural Resources · Cornell University
Abstract
This article contributes to understanding about the potential and limitations of social learning for collaborative natural resource management. Participants in a deliberative planning process involving a state agency and local communities developed common purpose and collaborative relationships, two requisites of comanagement. Eight process characteristics fostered social learning: open communication, diverse participation, unrestrained thinking, constructive conflict, democratic structure, multiple sources of knowledge, extended engagement, and facilitation. Social learning is necessary but not sufficient for collaborative management. Other requisites for comanagement, including capacity, appropriate…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 11.16
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 26
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Social learning
- Natural resource management
- Collaborative learning
- Facilitation
- Agency (philosophy)
- Natural resource
- Knowledge management
- Process (computing)