认识参与式社会生态系统建模中的政治影响

T. Lim, P. Glynn, G. Shenk, Patrick Bitterman, J. Guillaume, John C. Little, D. Webster
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摘要

利益相关者参与社会生态系统(SES)建模越来越被认为是一种可取的方式,可以引出关于SES行为的各种知识来源,并促进SES的包容性决策。了解参与式建模过程如何在社会科学系统的长期适应性管理背景下发挥作用,可以更好地设计参与式过程,以实现包容性知识、代表性和社会学习的预期结果,同时避免意外结果。长期适应性管理环境通常包括政治影响——试图转移或保持权力结构和权威,努力代表利益相关者的政治和经济利益——在用于塑造政策制定和实施的计算机模型中。在这项研究中,我们研究了一个时期,其中包括用于美国切萨皮克湾管理的流域模型的重大转变。切萨皮克湾流域模型自20世纪80年代以来一直在发展,并被许多人认为是参与式模型的典范案例。我们使用文献分析和对参与模型应用和开发过渡的参与者的访谈来揭示参与式模型可能受到不同类型政治影响的各种方式,其中一些会导致意想不到的结果,包括:对以实质性方式更新模型的困难的认识,涉众对模型/参与过程的“博弈”,以及对考虑模型未捕获的系统中的不确定性的阻力增加。这项研究表明,意想不到的或负面的结果可能与参与式决策和利益相关者学习有关,尽管它们经常被吹捧为参与式建模的好处。最后,我们提出了一个假设,即进一步发展计算机模型治理理论,将模型影响与科学-政策界面的更广泛的环境治理理论联系起来,可能会改善SES建模结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Recognizing political influences in participatory social-ecological systems modeling
Stakeholder participation in social-ecological systems (SES) modeling is increasingly considered a desirable way to elicit diverse sources of knowledge about SES behavior and to promote inclusive decision-making in SES. Understanding how participatory modeling processes function in the context of long-term adaptive management of SES may allow for better design of participatory processes to achieve the intended outcomes of inclusionary knowledge, representativeness, and social learning, while avoiding unintended outcomes. Long-term adaptive management contexts often include political influences -- attempts to shift or preserve power structures and authority, and efforts to represent the political and economic interests of stakeholders -- in the computer models that are used to shape policy making and implementation. In this research, we examine a period that included a major transition in the watershed model used for management of the Chesapeake Bay in the United States. The Chesapeake Bay watershed model has been in development since the 1980s, and is considered by many to be an exemplary case of participatory modeling. We use documentary analysis and interviews with participants involved in the model application and development transition to reveal a variety of ways in which participatory modeling may be subject to different kinds of political influences, some of which resulted in unintended outcomes, including: perceptions of difficulty updating the model in substantive ways, “gaming” of the model/participatory process by stakeholders, and increasing resistance against considering uncertainty in the system not captured by the model. This research suggests unintended or negative outcomes may be associated with both participatory decision-making and stakeholder learning even though they are so often touted as the benefits of participatory modeling. We end with a hypothesis that further development of a theory of computer model governance to bridge model impact and broader theories of environmental governance at the science-policy interface may result in improved SES modeling outcomes.
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