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Published byBlaise Ellis Modified over 8 years ago
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So what? Why we need Interpretive Methods (IM) for water governance... Experiences from Ashford Integrated Alternatives RACHEL MACRORIE r.macrorie@bradford.ac.uk rachelmacrorie@googlemail.com
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Research interests Governance of change towards more sustainable systems Water & energy consumption (& production) RA Public engagement in water & energy systems - Ashford Integrated Alternatives PhD Energy use, carbon reduction & behaviour change
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IM & water governance Technological approaches dominate the sector Positivist research approaches perpetuate systems of organisation ‘We will only succeed in making changes if we adopt a new comprehensive approach’ (DEFRA, 2005:2) Take account of ‘the social and institutional context of consumer action’ (Jackson, 2005: v)
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IM benefits Provides valuable concrete, context dependent knowledge ( Flyvbjerg, 2006). To understand actions, practices and institutions, we need to grasp the relevant meanings, beliefs and preferences of the people involved (Bevir and Rhodes, 2004) Unpacks power structures Space for reflection, learning & renegotiation Challenges existing understandings Sets precedent for new approaches
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AIA: Savings at Home retrofit
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Resource ownership & responsibility Citizens with rights to communal resources Individual consumers who pay for commodities or services Passive reliance upon technology Actively engaged in resource management Cultural theory framework
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Information & encouragement: ‘This is what we should be doing more of, actually giving people information, encouraging them, reducing our resource use’ Goal-orientated behaviour: ‘I’m not trying to get down to a particular unit of electricity usage per week’ Collective challenge: ‘The costs are part of it but environmentally, the fact that it’s going to run out...we’ve really got to do our bit to save what we can’ Research outcomes
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IM designed intervention Demonstrable Impacts: + Neighbourhood & integrated approach - Broader sustainability approach - Trust of lead organisation & credibility of intervention Desired Impacts: ‘Action Research’ Community based approaches Deliberative decision making
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Barrier to IM research 1. Not a tried and tested approach in socio-technical-systems research 2. Exploratory, not predictive 3. Resource (time, money) intensive 4. Premised on ideas about power relations & altering systems of provision 5. Outcomes might be challenging e.g. advocating public engagement 6. Requires institutional openness to expose & reflect upon learning Overcoming barriers to IM Means to overcome barrier Demonstrate application and promote successful cases Explain added-value of IM research Added value & interdisciplinary research Involve resource governance organisations throughout Present results constructively & link to current political agendas Manage expectations
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