A Comparison of a Collaborative and Top-Down Approach to the Use of Science in Policy: Establishing Marine Protected Areas in California

The National Research Council has proposed two distinct approaches over the past 20 years for guiding decision making about risk. These two approaches are widely applicable to environmental decision‐making and are exemplified by two attempts to establish Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) in California w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Policy studies journal 2004-05, Vol.32 (2), p.187-207
Hauptverfasser: Weible, Christopher, Sabatier, Paul A., Lubell, Mark
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Lubell, Mark
description The National Research Council has proposed two distinct approaches over the past 20 years for guiding decision making about risk. These two approaches are widely applicable to environmental decision‐making and are exemplified by two attempts to establish Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) in California with the implementation of the 1999 Marine Life Protection Act. The first attempt, which parallels the NRC's 1983 linear scientific approach, was a top‐down process that involved a Master Plan Team of scientists who created a proposal before gathering public input. The second attempt, which parallels the NRC's 1996 analytic and deliberative approach, involved a diverse set of stakeholders, including scientists, who worked in a collaborative process to provide a range of recommendations. We apply a three‐tiered model of elite belief systems drawn from the Advocacy Coalition Framework to show that stakeholder preferences for either of these approaches is a function of their deep core beliefs. Stakeholders with strong preferences for scientific management support empirical claims for the benefits of MPAs and are more optimistic about the linear scientific approach compared to the analytic and deliberative approach for protecting major habitats, avoiding adverse fishing effects, and avoiding unfair agency domination. In contrast, stakeholders with pro‐collaborative beliefs respect local knowledge and are more optimistic about the analytic and deliberative approach compared to the linear scientific approach for avoiding adverse fishing effects and unfair agency domination.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1541-0072.2004.00060.x
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source PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Business Source Complete; Political Science Complete; Wiley Online Library All Journals
subjects Administrative agencies
Advocacy
Analysis
California
Collaboration
Comparative studies
Cooperation
Councils
Decision making
Domestic policy
Environmental Policy
Federal legislation
Fishing
Government agencies
Government programs
Interest Groups
Knowledge
Marine conservation
Meetings
Participation
Policy Making
Science
Science and technology policy
Scientific Research
Scientists
Stakeholders
Working groups
title A Comparison of a Collaborative and Top-Down Approach to the Use of Science in Policy: Establishing Marine Protected Areas in California
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