Davis Emily Jane, White Eric M, Cerveny Lee K, Seesholtz David, Nuss Meagan L, Ulrich Donald R
Forestry and Natural Resources Extension, Department of Forest Ecosystems and Society, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, USA.
Pacific Northwest Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Portland, OR, USA.
Environ Manage. 2017 Nov;60(5):908-921. doi: 10.1007/s00267-017-0913-5. Epub 2017 Aug 16.
In the United States, over 191 million acres of land is managed by the United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service, a federal government agency. In several western U.S. states, organized collaborative groups have become a de facto governance approach to providing sustained input on management decisions on much public land. This is most extensive in Oregon, where at least 25 "forest collaboratives" currently exist. This affords excellent opportunities for studies of many common themes in collaborative governance, including trust, shared values, and perceptions of success. We undertook a statewide survey of participants in Oregon forest collaboratives to examine differences in motivations, perceptions of success, and satisfaction among Forest Service participants ("agency participants"), who made up 31% of the sample, and other respondents ("non-agency") who represent nonfederal agencies, interest groups, citizens, and non-governmental groups. We found that agency participants differed from non-agency participants. They typically had higher annual incomes, and were primarily motivated to participate to build trust. However, a majority of all respondents were similar in not indicating any other social or economic motivations as their primary reason for collaborating. A majority also reported satisfaction with their collaborative-despite not ranking collaborative performance on a number of specific potential outcomes highly. Together, this suggests that collaboration in Oregon is currently perceived as successful despite not achieving many specific outcomes. Yet there were significant differences in socioeconomic status and motivation that could affect the ability of agency and nonagency participants to develop and achieve mutually-desired goals.
在美国,超过1.91亿英亩的土地由联邦政府机构美国农业部森林服务局管理。在美国西部的几个州,有组织的协作团体已成为一种事实上的治理方式,为许多公共土地的管理决策持续提供意见。这在俄勒冈州最为广泛,该州目前至少有25个“森林协作组织”。这为研究协作治理中的许多共同主题提供了绝佳机会,包括信任、共同价值观和对成功的认知。我们对俄勒冈州森林协作组织的参与者进行了一项全州范围的调查,以研究森林服务局参与者(“机构参与者”,占样本的31%)与代表非联邦机构、利益集团、公民和非政府组织的其他受访者(“非机构参与者”)在动机、对成功的认知和满意度方面的差异。我们发现机构参与者与非机构参与者存在差异。他们通常年收入较高,参与的主要动机是建立信任。然而,所有受访者中的大多数在未将任何其他社会或经济动机作为合作的主要原因这一点上是相似的。大多数人还表示对他们的合作感到满意——尽管在一些具体的潜在成果方面没有对合作表现给予高度评价。总体而言,这表明尽管没有实现许多具体成果,但俄勒冈州的合作目前仍被视为成功。然而,在社会经济地位和动机方面存在显著差异,这可能会影响机构和非机构参与者制定和实现共同期望目标的能力。