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Evaluation of Collaborative Land Use Planning in British Columbia

Evaluation of Collaborative Land Use Planning in British Columbia. Thomas Gunton, Chad Day, Peter Williams School of Resource and Environmental Management. Research Program (FRBC and SSHRC). 1. Design Collaborative Planning System 1988-1992 2. Preliminary Evaluation 1993-1998

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Evaluation of Collaborative Land Use Planning in British Columbia

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  1. Evaluation of Collaborative Land Use Planning in British Columbia Thomas Gunton, Chad Day, Peter Williams School of Resource and Environmental Management

  2. Research Program (FRBC and SSHRC) • 1. Design Collaborative Planning System • 1988-1992 • 2. Preliminary Evaluation • 1993-1998 • 3. Evaluation Planning Process • 2001-2004 • 4. Evaluation Planning Implementation • 2002-2005

  3. Collaborative Planning/Shared Decision-making • Delegation of planning to stakeholders who engage in face to face principled negotiation to reach a consensus agreement • Arose out if dissatisfaction with traditional “consultative” participation methods and increasing conflict among stakeholders

  4. Benefits of Collaborative Planning • 1. Reach Agreement/Decision • 2. Better Decisions • 3. Better Implementation • 4. Social Capital

  5. Limitations • 1. Stakeholder Reluctance • 2. Inequality of Power • 3. Limited Applicability • 4. Vague Solutions • 5. Inadequate Accountability • stakeholders, public, science • 6. Logistics

  6. British Columbia • Background • War in the Woods (1980s-early 1990s) • Dissatisfaction with traditional resource planning • Adopted Collaborative Planning 1992 • Commission of Resources and Environment(CORE) • Land and Resource Management Plans (LRMPs)

  7. Strategic Land Use Planning 1980s “war in the woods”

  8. Collaborative Planning Process • 1. Preliminary Organization • 2. Process Design and Initiation (ToR) • 3. Information Collection • 4. Prepare and Evaluate Options • 5. Plan Recommendation • 6. Plan Implementation

  9. Collaborative Plan Characteristics • 1. Stakeholders 12-70 • 2. Area 3,000-100,000 sq.mi. (16,000) • 3. Population 6,000-350,000 (15,000) • 3. Time 3-6 years • 4. Number 23

  10. Decision-Making • Consensus 13 • Virtual Consensus 2 • No Agreement 4 (CORE) • In Progress 4

  11. Research Method for Evaluating Process • 1. Evaluation Method- Process and Output Criteria • 2. Document Process • 3. Design and Administer Survey • 4. Analyze • 5. Conclusions and Recommendations

  12. Research Questions • 1. Was the Process a Success? • 2. What Factors were Key? • 3. Lessons for Theory and Practice

  13. Defining Success • 1. Agreement Reached • 2. Good Agreement (support) • 3. Agreement Implemented • 4. Achieve Other Benefits (Social Capital)

  14. Survey

  15. Who Benefited Most?

  16. Implications for Theory • 1. More likely to reach agreement YES • 2. More likely to implement YES • 3. More likely in public interest YES • 4. Creates other benefits YES

  17. Limitations • 1. Stakeholder Reluctance (No) • 2. Inequality of Power (Yes) • 3. Limited Applicability No • 4. Vague Solutions (No) • 5. Inadequate Accountability No • stakeholders, public, science • 6. Logistics No

  18. Conclusions • 1. Collaborative Planning Successful • 2. Keys to Success external and internal • 3. External- BATNAS • 4. Internal - Process Management • 5. Future Research

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