A contextual framework for understanding good practice in integrated catchment management

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Abstract

Principles of good practice for collaborative resource management were derived from the literature and their use studied in a range of integrated catchment management processes. Desk-based reviews and interviews with participants allowed the principles to be refined and described within a framework that illustrates the interrelationships between core principles, enabling principles, precursors to a project and the influence of external factors on such collaborative processes. The findings illustrate the importance of these relationships in understanding how success is defined and under what conditions successful outcomes can be achieved. Understanding how these procedural aspects influence outcomes contributes to the wider literature on collaborative resource management that often treats processes separately from their context. © 2010 University of Newcastle upon Tyne.

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Marshall, K., Blackstock, K. L., & Dunglinson, J. (2010). A contextual framework for understanding good practice in integrated catchment management. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 53(1), 63–89. https://doi.org/10.1080/09640560903399780

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