Discourse inertia and the governance of transboundary rivers in Asia

Changes in political, social and environmental arenas increase challenges for complex policy processes. However, areas of public policy are dominated by anachronistic instruments. These are potentially unsuitable and unsustainable due to their failure to account for geopolitics or entertain alternat...

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Main Author: Jessica M. Williams
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-03-01
Series:Earth System Governance
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589811619300400
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spelling doaj-c0179fa5226a4760bab2041f845991462020-11-25T03:28:20ZengElsevierEarth System Governance2589-81162020-03-013100041Discourse inertia and the governance of transboundary rivers in AsiaJessica M. Williams0Centre for Civil Society and Governance, Faculty of Social Science, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam Road, Hong Kong SAR, ChinaChanges in political, social and environmental arenas increase challenges for complex policy processes. However, areas of public policy are dominated by anachronistic instruments. These are potentially unsuitable and unsustainable due to their failure to account for geopolitics or entertain alternative, potentially more appropriate, policies and approaches. This can become evident in a certain discourse or narrative continuously dominating an area of governance and decision making, even when they conflict with contemporary needs and the geopolitical contexts. This appears prevalent within water management, particularly in the transboundary context. Here, outdated paradigms dominate the agenda, despite geopolitical changes, resulting unsustainable outcomes. The concept of “discourse inertia” is developed to better understand these situations. Discourse inertia is considered and demonstrated in the context of transboundary water in the developing economies of South and Southeast Asia. This contributes to understanding how an actor group can maintain dominance and the wider implications of such situations.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589811619300400Transboundary riversDiscourseAsiaGovernance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jessica M. Williams
spellingShingle Jessica M. Williams
Discourse inertia and the governance of transboundary rivers in Asia
Earth System Governance
Transboundary rivers
Discourse
Asia
Governance
author_facet Jessica M. Williams
author_sort Jessica M. Williams
title Discourse inertia and the governance of transboundary rivers in Asia
title_short Discourse inertia and the governance of transboundary rivers in Asia
title_full Discourse inertia and the governance of transboundary rivers in Asia
title_fullStr Discourse inertia and the governance of transboundary rivers in Asia
title_full_unstemmed Discourse inertia and the governance of transboundary rivers in Asia
title_sort discourse inertia and the governance of transboundary rivers in asia
publisher Elsevier
series Earth System Governance
issn 2589-8116
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Changes in political, social and environmental arenas increase challenges for complex policy processes. However, areas of public policy are dominated by anachronistic instruments. These are potentially unsuitable and unsustainable due to their failure to account for geopolitics or entertain alternative, potentially more appropriate, policies and approaches. This can become evident in a certain discourse or narrative continuously dominating an area of governance and decision making, even when they conflict with contemporary needs and the geopolitical contexts. This appears prevalent within water management, particularly in the transboundary context. Here, outdated paradigms dominate the agenda, despite geopolitical changes, resulting unsustainable outcomes. The concept of “discourse inertia” is developed to better understand these situations. Discourse inertia is considered and demonstrated in the context of transboundary water in the developing economies of South and Southeast Asia. This contributes to understanding how an actor group can maintain dominance and the wider implications of such situations.
topic Transboundary rivers
Discourse
Asia
Governance
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589811619300400
work_keys_str_mv AT jessicamwilliams discourseinertiaandthegovernanceoftransboundaryriversinasia
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