Sutton Abigail M, Rudd Murray A
Environment Department, University of York, York, UK.
Department of Environment Sciences, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Environ Manage. 2016 Oct;58(4):565-84. doi: 10.1007/s00267-016-0737-8. Epub 2016 Jul 7.
The governance of small-scale fisheries (SSF) is challenging due to the uncertainty, complexity, and interconnectedness of social, political, ecological, and economical processes. Conventional SSF management has focused on a centralized and top-down approach. A major criticism of conventional management is the over-reliance on 'expert science' to guide decision-making and poor consideration of fishers' contextually rich knowledge. That is thought to exacerbate the already low governance potential of SSF. Integrating scientific knowledge with fishers' knowledge is increasingly popular and is often assumed to help reduce levels of biophysical and institutional uncertainties. Many projects aimed at encouraging knowledge integration have, however, been unsuccessful. Our objective in this research was to assess factors that influence knowledge integration and the uptake of integrated knowledge into policy-making. We report results from 54 semi-structured interviews with SSF researchers and practitioners from around the globe. Our analysis is framed in terms of scientific credibility, societal legitimacy, and policy saliency, and we discuss cases that have been partially or fully successful in reducing uncertainty via push-and-pull-oriented boundary crossing initiatives. Our findings suggest that two important factors affect the science-policy-societal boundary: a lack of consensus among stakeholders about what constitutes credible knowledge and institutional uncertainty resulting from shifting policies and leadership change. A lack of training for scientific leaders and an apparent 'shelf-life' for community organizations highlight the importance of ongoing institutional support for knowledge integration projects. Institutional support may be enhanced through such investments, such as capacity building and specialized platforms for knowledge integration.
小规模渔业(SSF)的治理颇具挑战,因为社会、政治、生态和经济过程存在不确定性、复杂性且相互关联。传统的小规模渔业管理侧重于集中式的自上而下的方法。对传统管理的一个主要批评是过度依赖“专家科学”来指导决策,而对渔民丰富的情境知识考虑不足。这被认为会加剧小规模渔业本就很低的治理潜力。将科学知识与渔民知识相结合越来越流行,并且通常被认为有助于降低生物物理和制度方面的不确定性水平。然而,许多旨在鼓励知识整合的项目都未成功。我们这项研究的目的是评估影响知识整合以及将整合后的知识纳入政策制定过程的因素。我们报告了对来自全球的小规模渔业研究人员和从业者进行的54次半结构化访谈的结果。我们的分析围绕科学可信度、社会合法性和政策显著性展开,并且我们讨论了通过以推拉为导向的跨界举措在降低不确定性方面部分或完全成功的案例。我们的研究结果表明,有两个重要因素影响科学 - 政策 - 社会边界:利益相关者对于什么构成可信知识缺乏共识,以及政策变化和领导层变动导致的制度不确定性。科学领导者缺乏培训以及社区组织明显的“保质期”凸显了对知识整合项目持续提供制度支持的重要性。可以通过能力建设和知识整合专门平台等投资来加强制度支持。