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Four Cultural Narratives for Managing Social-ecological Complexity in Public Natural Resource Management

Nick A. Kirsop-Taylor*, Adam P. Hejnowicz, Karen Scott

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Public Natural Resource Management (NRM) agencies operate in complex social-ecological domains. These complexities proliferate unpredictably therefore investigating and supporting the ability of public agencies to respond effectively is increasingly important. However, understanding how public NRM agencies innovate and restructure to negotiate the range of particular complexities they face is an under researched field. One particular conceptualisation of the social-ecological complexities facing NRM agencies that is of growing influence is the Water–Energy–Food (WEF) nexus. Yet, as a tool to frame and understand those complexities it has limitations. Specifically, it overlooks how NRMs respond institutionally to these social-ecological complexities in the context of economic and organisational challenges—thus creating a gap in the literature. Current debates in public administration can be brought to bear here. Using an organisational cultures approach, this paper reports on a case study with a national NRM agency to investigate how they are attempting to transform institutionally to respond to complexity in challenging times. The research involved 12 elite interviews with senior leaders from Natural Resources Wales, (NRW) and investigated how cultural narratives are being explicitly and implicitly constructed and mobilised to this end. The research identified four distinct and sequential cultural narratives: collaboration, communication, trust, and empowerment where each narrative supported the delivery of different dimensions of NRW’s social-ecological complexity mandate. Counter to the current managerialist approaches in public administration, these results suggest that the empowerment of expert bureaucrats is important in responding effectively to complexity.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)419-434
Number of pages16
JournalEnvironmental Management
Volume66
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2020
Externally publishedYes

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • Culture
  • Environment
  • Organisation
  • Public agency
  • Social-ecological complexity
  • Water–Energy–Food nexus

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