Beyond scientific management / Ronald D. Brunner, Toddi A. Steelman -- The 15-mile reach: let the fish tell us / Lindy Coe-Juell -- The camino real: to care for the land and serve the people / Toddi A. Steelman, Donna W. Tucker -- Grassbanks: diffusion and adaptation from the radical center / Christine M. Edwards -- The Oregon Plan: a new way of doing business / Lindy Coe-Juell -- Community-based forestry goes to Washington / Christina M. Cromley -- Toward adaptive governance / Ronald D. Brunner, Toddi A. Steelman
Summary
Drawing on five detailed case studies from the American West, the authors explore and clarify how to expedite a transition toward adaptive governance and break the gridlock in natural resource policymaking. Unlike scientific management, which relies on science as the foundation for policies made through a central bureaucratic authority, adaptive governance integrates various types of knowledge and organizations. Adaptive governance relies on open decision-making processes recognizing multiple interests, community-based initiatives, and an integrative science in addition to traditional science. Case studies discussed include a program to protect endangered fish in the Colorado River with the active participation of water developers and environmentalists; a district ranger's innovative plan to manage national forestland in northern New Mexico; and how community-based forestry groups are affecting legislative change in Washington, D.C