Highlighting assumptions of community engagement in urban stream restoration

IF 1.7 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ECOLOGY
Freshwater Science Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI:10.1086/721540
Denzell A. Cross, J. Chappell
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Restoration practitioners experience mixed results when they try to engage community members in urban stream restoration projects. In some cases, practitioners make presumptions about community responses to restoration that lead to unsuccessful engagement and detract from restoration goals. During the 5th Symposium on Urbanization and Stream Ecology, we noticed that participants repeatedly discussed community stakeholder engagement as a tool for effective urban stream restoration. However, most presenters did not acknowledge that typical engagement strategies do not consider how the target community’s social, economic, and political dynamics will influence stakeholder response. As a result, many practitioners make assumptions about communities that can be counterproductive to engagement efforts. Here, we discuss 4 underlying assumptions that many researchers make when trying to engage community stakeholders: 1) community members and researchers have the same project goals, 2) educating residents is essential in garnering community support, 3) the community will benefit from the restoration effort, and 4) the community has solutions to contribute to the technical aspects of the restoration effort. We present and develop these assumptions in the context of relevant urban stream restoration projects and highlight the complexity represented across communities where urban stream restoration projects can take place. Land managers and researchers must first cultivate a thoughtful understanding of the community and its existing socioeconomic capacities before integrating community stakeholders into urban stream restoration projects. We believe highlighting these societal complexities will promote a deeper consideration of appropriate engagement strategies for urban stream restoration projects.
强调社区参与城市河流恢复的假设
当修复从业者试图让社区成员参与城市溪流修复项目时,他们的结果喜忧参半。在某些情况下,从业者对社区对修复的反应做出假设,导致参与失败并偏离修复目标。在第五届城市化与溪流生态研讨会期间,我们注意到与会者反复讨论社区利益相关者参与作为有效城市溪流恢复工具的问题。然而,大多数演讲者并不承认,典型的参与策略没有考虑目标社区的社会、经济和政治动态将如何影响利益相关者的反应。因此,许多从业者对社区做出的假设可能会对参与工作产生反作用。在这里,我们讨论了许多研究人员在试图吸引社区利益相关者时做出的4个基本假设:1)社区成员和研究人员有相同的项目目标,2)教育居民对获得社区支持至关重要,3)社区将从修复工作中受益,以及4)社区有解决方案来为修复工作的技术方面做出贡献。我们在相关城市溪流修复项目的背景下提出并发展了这些假设,并强调了城市溪流恢复项目所在社区的复杂性。土地管理者和研究人员在将社区利益相关者纳入城市溪流修复项目之前,必须首先培养对社区及其现有社会经济能力的深入理解。我们相信,强调这些社会复杂性将促进对城市溪流修复项目适当参与策略的深入考虑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Freshwater Science
Freshwater Science ECOLOGY-MARINE & FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
49
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Freshwater Science (FWS) publishes articles that advance understanding and environmental stewardship of all types of inland aquatic ecosystems (lakes, rivers, streams, reservoirs, subterranean, and estuaries) and ecosystems at the interface between aquatic and terrestrial habitats (wetlands, riparian areas, and floodplains). The journal regularly features papers on a wide range of topics, including physical, chemical, and biological properties of lentic and lotic habitats; ecosystem processes; structure and dynamics of populations, communities, and ecosystems; ecology, systematics, and genetics of freshwater organisms, from bacteria to vertebrates; linkages between freshwater and other ecosystems and between freshwater ecology and other aquatic sciences; bioassessment, conservation, and restoration; environmental management; and new or novel methods for basic or applied research.
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