‘No right to rubbish’: Mobilising post-normal science for planning Gisborne’s wastewater outfall
Scott Bremer
Marine Policy, 2014, vol. 46, issue C, 22-30
Abstract:
The field of integrated coastal management (ICM) represents a rich literature on the science–policy interface. While initially a project in science-based management, the evolution of ICM over the past 40 years has seen some scholars and practitioners promoting a more participatory science–policy interface, with ‘post-normal science’ put forward as one promising approach to framing this interface. This same evolution is seen in New Zealand’s coastal management, with increasing numbers of participatory initiatives implemented as a result of a growing dissatisfaction with science-based management to address certain issues. This paper presents the study of the successful ‘WARG’ (Wastewater Adjournment Review Group) initiative in Gisborne, where they engaged an approach closely resembling post-normal science, for planning for the city’s wastewater outfall. The study employed the conceptual lens of post-normal science to describe the WARG, before analysing how it contributed to high quality ICM. The hope was that by studying the WARG as post-normal science, and how this approach has promoted successful ICM in Gisborne, this will yield insights into how the post-normal science perspective may contribute to ICM more broadly. The study found that the WARG did closely correspond to the principles of post-normal science, and that these characteristics largely accounted for the successes of the WARG. More broadly it showed that, where the uncertainty and contentiousness of an issue defies science-based management, a participatory approach is more appropriate, and post-normal science represents a realistic approach. Indeed, the WARG demonstrated that a successfully-run post-normal science approach can contribute to high quality ICM, which is (i) substantively, founded in a more comprehensive knowledge base; (ii) normatively, more democratic; and (iii) instrumentally, more likely to arrive at consensus.
Keywords: Integrated coastal management; Science–policy interface; Post-normal science; New Zealand (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2014
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eee:marpol:v:46:y:2014:i:c:p:22-30
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpol.2014.01.001
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