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Title page for ETD etd-04062004-150042


Type of Document Dissertation
Author Dasse, Carl Michael
URN etd-04062004-150042
Title Understanding Collaborative Natural Resource Management Programs and Institutions
Degree Doctor of Philosophy
Department Political Science, Department of
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
Richard C. Feiock Committee Chair
Charles Barrilleaux Committee Member
Ralph S. Brower Committee Member
Thomas Carsey Committee Member
Keywords
  • Policy Adoption
  • Collaborative Managment
  • Watershed Intiatives
  • Ecosystem Management
  • Transaction Costs
  • Environmental Policy
  • Political Transaction Costs
Date of Defense 2004-03-22
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
The management of natural resources has undergone a fundamental change over the past

decade. The traditional management approach that relies on command and control institutions,

and punitive measures to enforce existing statues is now being used in conjunction with

compliance based strategies. Compliance based programs rely on positive incentives and the

community collaborative decision making model to govern natural resources. The most widely

used compliance based strategy is collaborative management. The three most common types of

collaborative management are ecosystem management, watershed initiatives and forestry

partnerships. This dissertation examines why state legislatures adopt collaborative management

programs, and analyzes the factors effecting the stakeholder’s evaluation of collaborative

institutions. The theories of subsystem politics and transaction cost economics are used to

answer these questions.

The following transaction costs influence the likelihood that a state will adopt a collaborativemanagement program: commitment costs, agency costs, and decision making costs. Thesecosts effect adoption by affecting the exchange that occurs among legislators and their

constituents, which in turn impacts the costs associated with this exchange. Additionally, the

natural resource management subsystems in some states are more likely to change than the

subsystems in other states. Factors such as the mean educational attainment, per capita

income, and the political control of government institutions effect if a state’s resource

management subsystems are prone to change.

The evaluation of collaborative institutions is impacted by institutional rules, individual traits and institutional characteristics. The evaluation of a collaborative institution can be done by examining how actors evaluate the decision making process used by their group. Individuals evaluate the decision make process more favorably if their group has an institutional rule limiting discussion. Stakeholders with prior management experience rate the process unfavorably because collaborative institutions weaken their influence over existing deterrence based

institutions. If people believe their participation in a collaborative group will benefit them over time, they rate the process more favorably.

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  01_cmd_Intro.pdf 70.97 Kb 00:00:19 00:00:10 00:00:08 00:00:04 < 00:00:01
  02_cmd_chap1.pdf 134.80 Kb 00:00:37 00:00:19 00:00:16 00:00:08 < 00:00:01
  03_cmd_chap2.pdf 132.49 Kb 00:00:36 00:00:18 00:00:16 00:00:08 < 00:00:01
  04_cmd_chap3.pdf 176.19 Kb 00:00:48 00:00:25 00:00:22 00:00:11 < 00:00:01
  05_cmd_chap4.pdf 191.80 Kb 00:00:53 00:00:27 00:00:23 00:00:11 00:00:01
  06_cmd_chap5.pdf 242.22 Kb 00:01:07 00:00:34 00:00:30 00:00:15 00:00:01
  07_cmd_chap6.pdf 118.05 Kb 00:00:32 00:00:16 00:00:14 00:00:07 < 00:00:01
  08_cmd_Appendix.pdf 140.91 Kb 00:00:39 00:00:20 00:00:17 00:00:08 < 00:00:01
  09_cmd_HumanSubjects.pdf 79.11 Kb 00:00:21 00:00:11 00:00:09 00:00:04 < 00:00:01
  10_cmd_Bibliograph&BIO.pdf 131.23 Kb 00:00:36 00:00:18 00:00:16 00:00:08 < 00:00:01

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