ABSTRACT
Co-management is a highly dynamic, evolving, adaptive, and forward looking process. This edited volume covers theoretical background and includes supporting lessons learnt from field experiences. The book has case studies from both North and South America (co-management of fisheries, resilience in near-shore waters of the Great Lakes
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter 3|15 pages
Working Toward Co-Management of the Raccoon River Watershed in Iowa
The Role of Civil Society
chapter 6|24 pages
Towards Community-based Management of Water Resources
A Critical Ethnography of Lake and Groundwater Conservation in Pushkar, India
chapter 8|21 pages
Co-Generated Knowledge for Co-Management of a Mobile Resource
Anishinabek/Ontario Fisheries Resource Centre
chapter 9|29 pages
Taking the “Co” out of “Co-Management”
The Delegitimization of Fishing Communities on Lake Victoria, E. Africa
chapter 12|11 pages
Irrigation Water Co-Management in The Limarí River Basin, Chile
Location of the Limarí River Basin and its Climate
chapter 13|7 pages
Adaptive Co-Management and Learning: Developments in
Developments in Coastal Management in the Netherlands from 1985 to 2010
chapter 14|25 pages
The Roles of Knowledge in the Emergence of Co-Management Initiatives for Transboundary Groundwaters: The Case of the
The Case of the Génévois Aquifer