Balancing collaboration with coordination: Contesting eradication in the Australian plant pest and disease biosecurity system

The logistical challenge of coordinating natural resource management actions across large scales is typically complicated by the diversity of stakeholders’ interests. Devising a plan is difficult. Getting diverse stakeholders to agree to and adhere to any logistical solution is harder still. Hence l...

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Main Authors: Ryan Robert Jeff McAllister, Catherine J Robinson, Alinta Brown, Kirsten Maclean, Suzy Perry, Shuang Liu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Utrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services) 2017-03-01
Series:International Journal of the Commons
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/701
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spelling doaj-b7a0c183f7374adc9abe95f1b10cd51b2020-11-25T03:49:38ZengUtrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services)International Journal of the Commons1875-02812017-03-0111133035410.18352/ijc.701336Balancing collaboration with coordination: Contesting eradication in the Australian plant pest and disease biosecurity systemRyan Robert Jeff McAllister0Catherine J Robinson1Alinta Brown2Kirsten Maclean3Suzy Perry4Shuang Liu5CSIRO Brisbane, Australia & Plant Biosecurity Cooperative Research CentreCSIRO Brisbane, Australia, Plant Biosecurity Cooperative Research Centre, Australia & Northern Institute, Charles Darwin University, AustraliaLearning Sciences Institute Australia, Australian Catholic UniversityCSIRO Brisbane, Australia & Plant Biosecurity Cooperative Research CentrePlant Biosecurity Cooperative Research Centre, Australia & Queensland Government, BrisbanePlant Biosecurity Cooperative Research Centre, Australia & CSIRO CanberraThe logistical challenge of coordinating natural resource management actions across large scales is typically complicated by the diversity of stakeholders’ interests. Devising a plan is difficult. Getting diverse stakeholders to agree to and adhere to any logistical solution is harder still. Hence logistical solutions to large-scale problems involve a combination of coordination, and trust-building and contestation which are two key features of collaboration. We studied networks based on stakeholder participation in institutional responses to agricultural pest and disease incursions, where the spatial complexity of response is further challenged by the need to design and implement plans quickly in order to stop the spread of incursions. Using data from the 2010 Australian myrtle rust incursion, we used novel statistical network methods which showed that policy forums at national scales, where higher-level decisions are made, were associated with denser overlapping stakeholder interactions signifying collaboration (bondingcapital, high transaction-costs). Our qualitative data unpacked this, showing how at times uncertainty in process and information is used by some stakeholders to contest decisions at national scales. We failed to find statistical evidence that at local scales, where plans are implemented more-or-less at face value, networks exhibited lower-transaction cost interactions associated with the socially cheaper task of coordination (bridging-capital, low transaction-costs). By identifying the mix of coordination and collaboration in networks for solving environmental problems, capacity building can be more targeted, and rules-of-behaviour can be developed that better fit the requirements of the diverse tasks involved.https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/701agricultureeucalyptus rustexponential random graph modelrisk hypothesissocial network theory
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ryan Robert Jeff McAllister
Catherine J Robinson
Alinta Brown
Kirsten Maclean
Suzy Perry
Shuang Liu
spellingShingle Ryan Robert Jeff McAllister
Catherine J Robinson
Alinta Brown
Kirsten Maclean
Suzy Perry
Shuang Liu
Balancing collaboration with coordination: Contesting eradication in the Australian plant pest and disease biosecurity system
International Journal of the Commons
agriculture
eucalyptus rust
exponential random graph model
risk hypothesis
social network theory
author_facet Ryan Robert Jeff McAllister
Catherine J Robinson
Alinta Brown
Kirsten Maclean
Suzy Perry
Shuang Liu
author_sort Ryan Robert Jeff McAllister
title Balancing collaboration with coordination: Contesting eradication in the Australian plant pest and disease biosecurity system
title_short Balancing collaboration with coordination: Contesting eradication in the Australian plant pest and disease biosecurity system
title_full Balancing collaboration with coordination: Contesting eradication in the Australian plant pest and disease biosecurity system
title_fullStr Balancing collaboration with coordination: Contesting eradication in the Australian plant pest and disease biosecurity system
title_full_unstemmed Balancing collaboration with coordination: Contesting eradication in the Australian plant pest and disease biosecurity system
title_sort balancing collaboration with coordination: contesting eradication in the australian plant pest and disease biosecurity system
publisher Utrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services)
series International Journal of the Commons
issn 1875-0281
publishDate 2017-03-01
description The logistical challenge of coordinating natural resource management actions across large scales is typically complicated by the diversity of stakeholders’ interests. Devising a plan is difficult. Getting diverse stakeholders to agree to and adhere to any logistical solution is harder still. Hence logistical solutions to large-scale problems involve a combination of coordination, and trust-building and contestation which are two key features of collaboration. We studied networks based on stakeholder participation in institutional responses to agricultural pest and disease incursions, where the spatial complexity of response is further challenged by the need to design and implement plans quickly in order to stop the spread of incursions. Using data from the 2010 Australian myrtle rust incursion, we used novel statistical network methods which showed that policy forums at national scales, where higher-level decisions are made, were associated with denser overlapping stakeholder interactions signifying collaboration (bondingcapital, high transaction-costs). Our qualitative data unpacked this, showing how at times uncertainty in process and information is used by some stakeholders to contest decisions at national scales. We failed to find statistical evidence that at local scales, where plans are implemented more-or-less at face value, networks exhibited lower-transaction cost interactions associated with the socially cheaper task of coordination (bridging-capital, low transaction-costs). By identifying the mix of coordination and collaboration in networks for solving environmental problems, capacity building can be more targeted, and rules-of-behaviour can be developed that better fit the requirements of the diverse tasks involved.
topic agriculture
eucalyptus rust
exponential random graph model
risk hypothesis
social network theory
url https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/701
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