Published 2007
Journal article
Open
Facilitating cooperation during times of chaos: Spontaneous orders and muddling through in Malinau District, Indonesia
Description
Adaptive management has become increasingly common where natural resource managers face complex and uncertain conditions. The collaboration required among managers and others to do adaptive management, however, is not always easy to achieve. The authors describe efforts to work with villagers and government officials in Malinau, East Kalimantan Indonesia, where a weak, uncertain institutional setting and complex shifting political landscape made formal cooperation among these groups for forest management problematic. Through successive trials, the team learned instead to work with and enhance a "spontaneous order" of cooperation using four tactics:
- continuous physical presence,
- regular contact with the people who advised and were close to major decision makers,
- maintenance of multiple programmes to fit the needs of different interest groups, and
- hyperflexibility in resource allocation and schedules.
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Additional details
Publishing information
- Title
- Ecology and Society 12(1) 3: http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol12/iss1/art3/
Others
- Special note
- MFOLL
Legacy Data
- Legacy numeric recid
- 12840