Dealing with power games in a companion modelling process: Lessons from community water management in Thailand highlands

Although stakeholder participation is expected to promote equitable and sustainable natural resource management, lessons from the past tell us that more careful attention needs to be paid to achieving equitable impacts. Now the question is how to address social inequities and power asymmetries. Some...

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Main Authors: Cécile Barnaud, Annemarie van Paassen, Guy Trébuil, Tanya Promburom, François Bousquet
Format: Journal
Published: 2018
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http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/50494
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Institution: Chiang Mai University
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-504942018-09-04T04:54:11Z Dealing with power games in a companion modelling process: Lessons from community water management in Thailand highlands Cécile Barnaud Annemarie van Paassen Guy Trébuil Tanya Promburom François Bousquet Agricultural and Biological Sciences Social Sciences Although stakeholder participation is expected to promote equitable and sustainable natural resource management, lessons from the past tell us that more careful attention needs to be paid to achieving equitable impacts. Now the question is how to address social inequities and power asymmetries. Some authors emphasize the need for more dialogue, while others prefer a critical perspective, arguing that dialogue might not be sufficient to avert the risk of a process deepening existing social inequities. This article aims to enrich this debate and question the practical implications of the critical perspective through an in-depth analysis of power games in a participatory process. A Companion Modelling (ComMod) process was conducted in an Akha community of Northern Thailand with a critical perspective, i.e. with a concern for the less influent stakeholders. Simulation tools such as role-playing games were used to mediate a cross-cultural learning process among researchers, farmers and administrators about a local irrigation water management problem. The detailed analysis of power games in this learning and negotiation process reveals that in spite of initial power asymmetries, the poorest farmers of the community started to voice and assert their interests. This was very much due to the role of a Western researcher who put the equity issue on the public agenda and to the strategic support of a charismatic Christian leader. We identify a set of practical facilitation methods that helped to manage power asymmetries and to level the playing field, but we also discuss the main limits of our cultural-embedded methodological choices. Acknowledging that 'the facilitators' neutrality' is an illusion, this study allows us to raise the question of their social legitimacy. We suggest that they should systematically make explicit and reflect on their cultural-ideological background and methodological hypothesis and choices and their effects on the socio-political context. This article is an original attempt to accept this challenge. © 2010 Wageningen University. 2018-09-04T04:41:33Z 2018-09-04T04:41:33Z 2010-03-01 Journal 17508622 1389224X 2-s2.0-78650655859 10.1080/13892240903533152 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=78650655859&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/50494
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Social Sciences
spellingShingle Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Social Sciences
Cécile Barnaud
Annemarie van Paassen
Guy Trébuil
Tanya Promburom
François Bousquet
Dealing with power games in a companion modelling process: Lessons from community water management in Thailand highlands
description Although stakeholder participation is expected to promote equitable and sustainable natural resource management, lessons from the past tell us that more careful attention needs to be paid to achieving equitable impacts. Now the question is how to address social inequities and power asymmetries. Some authors emphasize the need for more dialogue, while others prefer a critical perspective, arguing that dialogue might not be sufficient to avert the risk of a process deepening existing social inequities. This article aims to enrich this debate and question the practical implications of the critical perspective through an in-depth analysis of power games in a participatory process. A Companion Modelling (ComMod) process was conducted in an Akha community of Northern Thailand with a critical perspective, i.e. with a concern for the less influent stakeholders. Simulation tools such as role-playing games were used to mediate a cross-cultural learning process among researchers, farmers and administrators about a local irrigation water management problem. The detailed analysis of power games in this learning and negotiation process reveals that in spite of initial power asymmetries, the poorest farmers of the community started to voice and assert their interests. This was very much due to the role of a Western researcher who put the equity issue on the public agenda and to the strategic support of a charismatic Christian leader. We identify a set of practical facilitation methods that helped to manage power asymmetries and to level the playing field, but we also discuss the main limits of our cultural-embedded methodological choices. Acknowledging that 'the facilitators' neutrality' is an illusion, this study allows us to raise the question of their social legitimacy. We suggest that they should systematically make explicit and reflect on their cultural-ideological background and methodological hypothesis and choices and their effects on the socio-political context. This article is an original attempt to accept this challenge. © 2010 Wageningen University.
format Journal
author Cécile Barnaud
Annemarie van Paassen
Guy Trébuil
Tanya Promburom
François Bousquet
author_facet Cécile Barnaud
Annemarie van Paassen
Guy Trébuil
Tanya Promburom
François Bousquet
author_sort Cécile Barnaud
title Dealing with power games in a companion modelling process: Lessons from community water management in Thailand highlands
title_short Dealing with power games in a companion modelling process: Lessons from community water management in Thailand highlands
title_full Dealing with power games in a companion modelling process: Lessons from community water management in Thailand highlands
title_fullStr Dealing with power games in a companion modelling process: Lessons from community water management in Thailand highlands
title_full_unstemmed Dealing with power games in a companion modelling process: Lessons from community water management in Thailand highlands
title_sort dealing with power games in a companion modelling process: lessons from community water management in thailand highlands
publishDate 2018
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=78650655859&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/50494
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