Abstract

Water governance is a major challenge in the Mediterranean context. Any action to drive water governance towards sustainability needs to be grounded in a holistic understanding of such challenges. Therefore, a first step towards the improvement of water governance is a grounded understanding of what is at stake, who are the actors involved, and how they interact. To achieve this level of understanding, we propose the use of the social–ecological Systems (SES) framework. This framework was developed to grasp the complexity of issues related to the sustainable use of public goods such as water. This study looks at water governance in the farming sector of three municipalities in the Alentejo and Algarve, in the south of Portugal. Data were collected using a literature review and 22 semi-structured interviews with territorial actors (i.e., public administration, non-governmental associations, private sector, decision-makers, and farmers). By using the SES framework, we provide an integrated characterization of water governance in the case study and identify the implicated factors. Between these factors, and focusing on the overlap between literature and actors’ perspectives, are (1) the lack of integrated and supported strategies for development, and (2) lack of communication between the actors that need to congregate efforts towards sustainable use of water resources. The study found few examples of collective efforts and long-lasting networks of collaboration, especially between science and practice. We conclude by arguing that place-based tailored policies are needed. Such policies should promote communication and collective actions between researchers, local organizations, public administration, and farmers.

Highlights

  • IntroductionGovernance models are understood as the routine within an institutional setting in which decisions are made and implemented and their effects addressed [3]

  • Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutralManagement of natural resources requires coordination and guidance for human uses of such resources, as well as an integration of their impacts on the environment [1,2].Governance models are understood as the routine within an institutional setting in which decisions are made and implemented and their effects addressed [3]

  • We focus on a specific case of water governance in the Mediterranean context, and the SES framework acts as a diagnostic tool to assess the sustainability of current water use

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Summary

Introduction

Governance models are understood as the routine within an institutional setting in which decisions are made and implemented and their effects addressed [3]. Governance models incorporate accepted and historically repeated ways of facing and finding solutions to societal challenges and illuminate the practical administrative organization of social relations and stakes [4]. Governance models are contextual mixtures of particular ways of viewing the world, policy goals, tools for implementation, policies, and specific management solutions applied at a given place and time through locally embedded practices of actors. Water governance towards sustainability implies overcoming conflicting policy issues and finding consensus with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations

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