Discovering the Political Implications of Coproduction in Water Governance

Robert Lepenies,Frank Hüesker,S. Beck,M. Brugnach

Published 2018 in Water

ABSTRACT

This paper asks what lessons can be learned from experiences with coproduction in water governance. For this, we review a comprehensive corpus of articles in the field of water governance that relies on the term. We find that there are radically different understandings of what coproduction means in different branches of the water governance literature. Through this review, we demonstrate how and why coproduction needs to be analyzed for its political implications. Despite being timely and pressing, these questions are not addressed in a sufficient way by the scholarly debate on coproduction. In order to fill this knowledge gap, we first distinguish different historical traditions of coproduction and then explore their political implications along three questions: The “why?”, the “who?”, and the “how?”. We show that these questions find different answers not just between but also within different traditions of using the term. After describing and contrasting these variants, we conclude by summarizing the main lessons from our review and by identifying questions which call for future research.

PUBLICATION RECORD

  • Publication year

    2018

  • Venue

    Water

  • Publication date

    2018-10-19

  • Fields of study

    Geology, Environmental Science, Political Science

  • Identifiers
  • External record

    Open on Semantic Scholar

  • Source metadata

    Semantic Scholar

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CLAIMS

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CONCEPTS

  • No concepts are published for this paper.

REFERENCES

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