Bridging Adaptive Learning and Desired Natural Resource Management Outcomes: Insights from Australian Planners
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Cox, Melanie
Choy, Darryl Low
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Abstract
Natural resource management (NRM) has been increasingly guided by governance arrangements seeking less centralized and hierarchical and more integrated and adaptive approaches to achieve desired social-ecological outcomes. Successful implementation of these approaches requires adaptive learning which entails the application of individual, institutional and social learning to adaptive co-management. This paper proposes and validates a conceptual model that identifies components of adaptive learning and their relationships with desired NRM outcomes. Supported by on-ground experience of Australian NRM planners, it discusses three key insights to enable bridging between adaptive learning and NRM outcomes: changing focus away from economic-efficiency culture, supporting learning and knowledge exchange structures, and reinventing practice.
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PLANNING PRACTICE AND RESEARCH
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34
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2
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Urban and regional planning