The HydroSocial Cycle approach to deepen on socio-ecological systems
analysis and water management
Abstract
Balancing socio-ecological systems among competing water demands is a
difficult and complex task. Traditional approaches based on limited,
linear growth optimization strategies overseen by command/control have
partially failed to account for the inherent unpredictability and
irreducible uncertainty affecting most water systems due to climate
change. Governments and managers are increasingly faced with
understanding driving-factors of major change processes affecting
multifunctional systems. In the last decades, the shift to address the
integrated management of water resources from a technocratic
“top-down” to a more integrated “bottom-up” and participatory
approach was motivated by the awareness that water challenges require
integrated solutions and a socially legitimate planning process.
Assuming water flows as physical, social, political, and symbolic
matters, it is necessary to entwining these domains in specific
configurations, in which key stakeholders and decision-makers could
directly interact through social-learning. The literature on integrated
water resources management highlights two important factors to achieve
this goal: to deepen stakeholders’ perception and to ensure their
participation as a mechanism of co-production of knowledge. Stakeholder
Analysis and Governance Modelling approaches are providing useful
knowledge about how to integrate social-learning in water management,
making the invisible, visible. The first one aims to identify and
categorize stakeholders according to competing water demands, while the
second one determines interactions, synergies, overlapping discourses,
expectations, and influences between stakeholders, including
power-relationships. The HydroSocial Cycle (HSC) analysis combines both
approaches as a framework to reinforce integrated water management by
focusing on stakeholder analysis and collaborative governance. This
method considers that water and society are (re)making each other so the
nature and competing objectives of stakeholders involved in complex
water systems may affect its sustainability and management. Using data
collected from a qualitative questionnaire and applying descriptive
statistics and matrices, the HSC deepens on interests, expectations, and
power-influence relationships between stakeholders by addressing six
main issues affecting decision-making processes: relevance,
representativeness, recognition, performance, knowledge, and
collaboration. The aim of this contribution is to outline this method
from both theory and practice perspective by highlighting the benefits
of including social sciences approaches in transdisciplinary research
collaborations when testing water management strategies affecting
competing and dynamic water systems.