Department of Environmental Science, Bangor House, Rhodes University, PO Box 94, Grahamstown, South Africa.
J Environ Manage. 2012 Dec 30;113:7-14. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2012.08.021. Epub 2012 Sep 14.
Social learning has become a central theme in natural resource management. This growing interest is underpinned by a number of assertions about the outcomes of social learning, and about the processes that support these outcomes. Yet researchers and practitioners who seek to engage with social learning through the natural resource management literature often become disorientated by the myriad processes and outcomes that are identified. We trace the roots of current assertions about the processes and outcomes of social learning in natural resource management, and assess the extent to which there is an emerging consensus on these assertions. Results suggest that, on the one hand, social learning is described as taking place through deliberative interactions amongst multiple stakeholders. During these interactions, it is argued that participants learn to work together and build relationships that allow for collective action. On the other hand, social learning is described as occurring through deliberate experimentation and reflective practice. During these iterative cycles of action, monitoring and reflection, participants learn how to cope with uncertainty when managing complex systems. Both of these processes, and their associated outcomes, are referred to as social learning. Where, therefore, should researchers and practitioners focus their attention? Results suggest that there is an emerging consensus that processes that support social learning involve sustained interaction between stakeholders, on-going deliberation and the sharing of knowledge in a trusting environment. There is also an emerging consensus that the key outcome of such learning is improved decision making underpinned by a growing awareness of human-environment interactions, better relationships and improved problem-solving capacities for participants.
社会学习已成为自然资源管理的核心主题。这种日益增长的兴趣是基于对社会学习结果以及支持这些结果的过程的一些断言。然而,那些希望通过自然资源管理文献参与社会学习的研究人员和实践者,往往会被识别出的众多过程和结果所困扰。我们追溯了当前关于自然资源管理中社会学习过程和结果的断言的根源,并评估了这些断言在多大程度上达成了共识。结果表明,一方面,社会学习被描述为通过多个利益相关者之间的审议互动发生的。在这些互动中,参与者被认为学会了共同合作并建立关系,从而实现集体行动。另一方面,社会学习被描述为通过刻意的实验和反思实践发生的。在这些行动、监测和反思的迭代循环中,参与者学会了在管理复杂系统时如何应对不确定性。这两个过程及其相关结果都被称为社会学习。那么,研究人员和实践者应该将注意力集中在哪里呢?结果表明,人们越来越一致地认为,支持社会学习的过程涉及利益相关者之间的持续互动、持续的审议以及在信任环境中共享知识。人们也越来越一致地认为,这种学习的关键结果是改善决策,这是建立在对人类与环境相互作用的认识不断提高、关系更好以及参与者解决问题能力提高的基础上的。