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The landscape of leadership in environmental governance: a case study from Solomon Islands

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The landscape of leadership in environmental governance: a case study from Solomon Islands. / Evans, Louisa S.; Cohen, Philippa J.; Case, Peter et al.
In: Human Ecology, Vol. 45, No. 3, 06.2017, p. 357-365.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Evans, LS, Cohen, PJ, Case, P, Hicks, C, Prideaux, M & Mills, D 2017, 'The landscape of leadership in environmental governance: a case study from Solomon Islands', Human Ecology, vol. 45, no. 3, pp. 357-365. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10745-017-9901-x

APA

Evans, L. S., Cohen, P. J., Case, P., Hicks, C., Prideaux, M., & Mills, D. (2017). The landscape of leadership in environmental governance: a case study from Solomon Islands. Human Ecology, 45(3), 357-365. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10745-017-9901-x

Vancouver

Evans LS, Cohen PJ, Case P, Hicks C, Prideaux M, Mills D. The landscape of leadership in environmental governance: a case study from Solomon Islands. Human Ecology. 2017 Jun;45(3):357-365. Epub 2017 Mar 11. doi: 10.1007/s10745-017-9901-x

Author

Evans, Louisa S. ; Cohen, Philippa J. ; Case, Peter et al. / The landscape of leadership in environmental governance : a case study from Solomon Islands. In: Human Ecology. 2017 ; Vol. 45, No. 3. pp. 357-365.

Bibtex

@article{a2bfb81ad6534d069f8c61a1e4e5a5d8,
title = "The landscape of leadership in environmental governance: a case study from Solomon Islands",
abstract = "We bring new insights to environmental governance research from leadership studies where there is a growing recognition that leadership is a process that is enacted through a “web of interactions incorporating both people and objects” (Hawkins et al. 2015: 953). Leadership is broadly defined as a process of influence resulting in shared direction and commitment (following Bolden et al. 2012 and Haslam et al. 2011). To illustrate what a more nuanced understanding of leadership can look like we employ a deliberately provocative analytical perspective inspired by Actor Network Theory which recognises that societal outcomes are shaped by relations among humans and non-human, including discursive, actants (Latour 2005; Dwiartama and Rosin 2014 and see discussion for detailed examples). We report on an empirical study of Solomon Islands{\textquoteright} engagement with the multi-national, multi-objective Coral Triangle Initiative on Coral Reefs, Fisheries and Food Security (CTI), an initiative that is labelled as potentially transformative. We aimed to understand how different actors perceive leadership for improved environmental governance in Solomon Islands in practice. First, we determine whether there are sources of leadership in addition to key individuals and organisations. We investigate the potential of organisations, policy and legislative instruments, and ideologies or discourses to enact leadership by influencing governance outcomes. Second, we establish how leadership varies across three different, potentially contested CTI goals – food security, biodiversity conservation and climate change adaptation – that in combination are expected to contribute to improved environmental governance. Third, we determine whether leadership can also disrupt or stall progress towards improved environmental governance outcomes. This paper aims to open up a broader debate about leadership research in environmental sciences – the empirical approach and evidence are illustrative rather than definitive.",
keywords = "Coastal and marine governance , Biodiversity , Fisheries, Food security , Conservation leadership, Climate change, Solomon Islands ",
author = "Evans, {Louisa S.} and Cohen, {Philippa J.} and Peter Case and Christina Hicks and Murray Prideaux and David Mills",
note = "The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10745-017-9901-x",
year = "2017",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1007/s10745-017-9901-x",
language = "English",
volume = "45",
pages = "357--365",
journal = "Human Ecology",
issn = "0300-7839",
publisher = "SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The landscape of leadership in environmental governance

T2 - a case study from Solomon Islands

AU - Evans, Louisa S.

AU - Cohen, Philippa J.

AU - Case, Peter

AU - Hicks, Christina

AU - Prideaux, Murray

AU - Mills, David

N1 - The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10745-017-9901-x

PY - 2017/6

Y1 - 2017/6

N2 - We bring new insights to environmental governance research from leadership studies where there is a growing recognition that leadership is a process that is enacted through a “web of interactions incorporating both people and objects” (Hawkins et al. 2015: 953). Leadership is broadly defined as a process of influence resulting in shared direction and commitment (following Bolden et al. 2012 and Haslam et al. 2011). To illustrate what a more nuanced understanding of leadership can look like we employ a deliberately provocative analytical perspective inspired by Actor Network Theory which recognises that societal outcomes are shaped by relations among humans and non-human, including discursive, actants (Latour 2005; Dwiartama and Rosin 2014 and see discussion for detailed examples). We report on an empirical study of Solomon Islands’ engagement with the multi-national, multi-objective Coral Triangle Initiative on Coral Reefs, Fisheries and Food Security (CTI), an initiative that is labelled as potentially transformative. We aimed to understand how different actors perceive leadership for improved environmental governance in Solomon Islands in practice. First, we determine whether there are sources of leadership in addition to key individuals and organisations. We investigate the potential of organisations, policy and legislative instruments, and ideologies or discourses to enact leadership by influencing governance outcomes. Second, we establish how leadership varies across three different, potentially contested CTI goals – food security, biodiversity conservation and climate change adaptation – that in combination are expected to contribute to improved environmental governance. Third, we determine whether leadership can also disrupt or stall progress towards improved environmental governance outcomes. This paper aims to open up a broader debate about leadership research in environmental sciences – the empirical approach and evidence are illustrative rather than definitive.

AB - We bring new insights to environmental governance research from leadership studies where there is a growing recognition that leadership is a process that is enacted through a “web of interactions incorporating both people and objects” (Hawkins et al. 2015: 953). Leadership is broadly defined as a process of influence resulting in shared direction and commitment (following Bolden et al. 2012 and Haslam et al. 2011). To illustrate what a more nuanced understanding of leadership can look like we employ a deliberately provocative analytical perspective inspired by Actor Network Theory which recognises that societal outcomes are shaped by relations among humans and non-human, including discursive, actants (Latour 2005; Dwiartama and Rosin 2014 and see discussion for detailed examples). We report on an empirical study of Solomon Islands’ engagement with the multi-national, multi-objective Coral Triangle Initiative on Coral Reefs, Fisheries and Food Security (CTI), an initiative that is labelled as potentially transformative. We aimed to understand how different actors perceive leadership for improved environmental governance in Solomon Islands in practice. First, we determine whether there are sources of leadership in addition to key individuals and organisations. We investigate the potential of organisations, policy and legislative instruments, and ideologies or discourses to enact leadership by influencing governance outcomes. Second, we establish how leadership varies across three different, potentially contested CTI goals – food security, biodiversity conservation and climate change adaptation – that in combination are expected to contribute to improved environmental governance. Third, we determine whether leadership can also disrupt or stall progress towards improved environmental governance outcomes. This paper aims to open up a broader debate about leadership research in environmental sciences – the empirical approach and evidence are illustrative rather than definitive.

KW - Coastal and marine governance

KW - Biodiversity

KW - Fisheries

KW - Food security

KW - Conservation leadership

KW - Climate change

KW - Solomon Islands

U2 - 10.1007/s10745-017-9901-x

DO - 10.1007/s10745-017-9901-x

M3 - Journal article

VL - 45

SP - 357

EP - 365

JO - Human Ecology

JF - Human Ecology

SN - 0300-7839

IS - 3

ER -