Full metadata
Title
Understanding governance dynamics in a social-ecological system: Chitwan community forests and the invasive mile-a-minute weed
Description
Employing an interdisciplinary approach with a grounding in new institutional economics, this dissertation investigates how institutions, as shared rules, norms, and strategies, mediate social-ecological outcomes in a system exposed to a novel threat in the form of a rapidly growing and especially destructive invasive plant, Mikania micrantha (Mikania). I explore whether and how communities (largely part of community forest user groups in the buffer zone of Chitwan National Park in Chitwan, Nepal) collectively act in the face of Mikania invasion. Collective action is vital to successful natural resource governance in a variety of contexts and systems globally. Understanding collective action and the role of institutions is especially important in the face of continued and amplifying global environmental changes impacting social-ecological systems, such as climate change and invasive species. Contributing to efforts to bolster knowledge of the role of collective action and institutions in social-ecological systems, this research first establishes that community forest governance and institutional arrangements are heterogeneous. I subsequently utilize content and institutional analyses to identify and address themes and norms related to Mikania management. The content analysis contributes an empirical study of the influence of trust in collective natural resource management efforts. Using two complementary econometric analyses of survey data from 1235 households, I additionally assess equity in access to community forest resources, an understudied area in the institutional literature, and the factors affecting collective action related to Mikania removal. Finally, an agent-based model of institutional change facilitates the comparison of two perspectives, rational choice and cultural diffusion, of how shared norms and strategies for Mikania management change over time, providing insight into institutional change generally. Results highlight the importance of trust and understanding the de facto, or on-the-ground institutions; the influence of perception on collective action; that integrating equity into institutional analyses may strengthen sustainable resource management efforts; and that rational choice is an unlikely mechanism of institutional change. The mixed-methods approach contributes to a more comprehensive understanding of the role of institutions and collective action in invasive species management and broadly to the scientific understanding of the role of institutions in mediating global environmental changes.
Date Created
2016
Contributors
- Sullivan, Abigail (Author)
- York, Abigail M (Thesis advisor)
- An, Li (Committee member)
- Yabiku, Scott T (Committee member)
- Hall, Sharon J (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
- Environmental Studies
- Sustainability
- collective action
- Community forestry
- environmental governance
- institutions
- Invasive Species
- Sustainability
- Persicaria perfoliata--Environmental aspects--Nepal--Royal Chitwan National Park.
- Persicaria perfoliata
- Natural resources, Communal--Nepal--Management.
- Natural resources, Communal
- National parks and reserves--Nepal--Management.
- National parks and reserves
- Community organization--Nepal.
- Community organization
Resource Type
Extent
xvi, 230 pages : illustrations (some color), maps (some color)
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.39462
Statement of Responsibility
by Abigail Sullivan
Description Source
Viewed on September 27, 2016
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2016
bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 166-191)
Field of study: Environmental social science
System Created
- 2016-08-01 08:04:11
System Modified
- 2021-08-30 01:21:58
- 3 years 2 months ago
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