Environmental and natural resource policy decision making is
changing. Increasingly citizens and management agency personnel are
seeking ways to do things differently; to participate meaningfully
in the decision making process as parties work through policy
conflicts. Doing things differently has come to mean doing things
collaboratively.
Daniels and Walker examine collaboration in environmental and
natural resource policy decision making and conflict management.
They address collaboration by featuring a method collaborative
learning, that has been designed to address decision making and
conflict management needs in complex and controversial policy
settings. As they illustrate, collaborative learning differs in
some significant ways from existing approaches for dealing with
policy decision making, public participation, and conflict
management. First, it is a hybrid of systems thinking and
alternative dispute resolution concepts. Second, it is grounded
explicitly in experiential, team-or organizational-and adult
learning theories. It is a theory-based framework through which
parties can make progress in the management of controversial
environmental policy situations. They discuss both the theory and
technique of collaborative learning and present cases where it has
been applied. This is a professional and teaching tool for
scholars, students, and researchers involved with environmental
issues as well as dispute resolution.
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