Abstract
Paradigms for land and water management are on the move. New approaches are said to be, or meant to be, more 'participatory', 'integrated', 'adaptive', 'ecosystem-based' and so on. The present paper explores emergent principles for land and water management in ecological management theory, environmental science and the social sciences. These principles comprise adaptive management, opportunity-driven analysis, visions of managers and the public, and co-management that includes local and supra-local rationality. The paper concludes that for river management, these principles largely reinforce each other. This lays a basis for a style of river management in which the river managers may continue to be the guardians of science-based and whole-basin rationality, while at the same time interacting more successfully with society. © Springer 2006.
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De Groot, W. T., & Lenders, H. J. R. (2006). Emergent principles for river management. In Hydrobiologia (Vol. 565, pp. 309–316). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10750-005-1921-7
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