Transcending Landscapes: Working Across Scales and Levels in Pastoralist Rangeland Governance

Environmental Management
Lance W RobinsonStephen S Moiko

Abstract

Landscape approaches can be subjected to mistakenly targeting a single "best" level of governance, and paying too little attention to the role that cross-scale and cross-level interactions play in governance. In rangeland settings, resources, patterns of use of those resources, and the institutions for managing the resources exist at multiple levels and scales. While the scholarship on commons offers some guidance on how to conceptualize governance in rangeland landscapes, some elements of commons scholarship-notably the "design principles" for effective governance of commons-do not seem to apply neatly to governance in pastoralist rangeland settings. This paper examines three cases where attempts have been made to foster effective landscape governance in such settings to consider how the materiality of commons influences the nature of cross-scale and cross-level interactions, and how these interactions affect governance. In all three cases, although external actors seemed to work appropriately and effectively at community and landscape levels, landscape governance mechanisms have been facing great challenges arising from relationships beyond the landscape, both vertically to higher levels of decision-making and horizontally to...Continue Reading

References

Apr 9, 1999·Science·E OstromD Policansky
Dec 13, 2003·Science·Thomas DietzPaul C Stern
Sep 24, 2004·Environmental Management·Per OlssonFikret Berkes
May 21, 2013·Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America·Jeffrey SayerLouise E Buck
Jul 3, 2015·Environmental Management·Lance W Robinson, Enock Makupa

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Citations

May 18, 2021·Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences·Thomas E CurrieLindsay Walker

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Methods Mentioned

BETA
RAP

Software Mentioned

Gomole
RAP
PRIME

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