Evaluating collaborative planning: a case study of a
Land and Resource Management Planning process.
by Gunton, Thomas I.^Peter, Thomas^Day, J.C.
Abstract
Planners increasingly rely on collaborative planning models that
engage stakeholders to develop plans through consensus-based
negotiations. While support for using collaborative planning models is
growing, evaluation of their effectiveness is in its infancy. This paper
reports on a case study evaluation, using a multiple criteria evaluation
method, of an innovative collaborative planning process to prepare a
strategic land use plan for a region in British Columbia, Canada. The
study reveals that the collaborative planning process generated
important benefits, including improved relationships and understanding,
even though it did not result in consensus agreement on a plan. The
outcome also shows that the plan did not result in consensus because
some stakeholders were not sufficiently engaged in the process. In
addition, an unrealistic timeline was imposed that led to a final offer
selection process whose result was ultimately rejected by the
government.
Resume
Les planificateurs comptent de plus en plus sur des modeles de
planification collaborative qui encouragent les intervenants a elaborer
des plans au moyen de negociations fondees sur l'atteinte d'un
consensus. Alors que l'appui a l'utilisation de modeles de
planification collaborative augmente, l'valuation de leur
efficacite en est encore a ses debuts. Le present article fait etat de
l'etude de cas de l'evaluation d'un processus de
planification collaborative novateur visant a preparer un plan
strategique d'utilisation des terres dans une region de la Colombie
Britannique en se servant d'une methode d'evaluation a
criteres multiples. L'etude revele que le processus de
planification collaborative a engendre d'importants avantages,
notamment une amelioration des relations et de la comprehension, bien
que le processus n'ait pas permis d'atteindre un consensus
quant au plan. Le resultat demontre egalement que le plan n'a pas
fait l'objet d'un consensus parce que l'engagement de
certains des intervenants envers le processus n'etait pas
suffisant. De plus, on avait impose un echeancier non realiste qui a
mene a un processus de selection d'une offre finale qui a en fin de
compte ete rejetee par le gouvernement.
Key Words
Collaborative planning, resource and environmental planning,
regional planning, dispute resolution, public participation
Introduction
Planners are increasingly relying on collaborative planning models
that engage stakeholders to develop plans through consensus-based
negotiations. Collaborative planning models are now adopted by many
resource agencies including the U.S. Forest Service and the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (Leach et al., Wondolleck and Yaffee
2000, Conley and Moote 2003) and are used in resource planning
throughout the world (Gunton and Day 2003). While support for using
collaborative planning models is growing, evaluation of their
effectiveness is still in its infancy. Advocates and critics of
collaborative planning are united in their call for more research.
The purpose of this paper is to report on an evaluation of
collaborative planning that is based on a longer term research project
being conducted by the Sustainable Planning Research Group in the School
of Resource and Environmental Management at Simon Fraser University. The
research has been evaluating the unique effort by the government of
British Columbia to prepare land use plans using a collaborative
planning model termed shared decision making. Twenty-one land use plans
have been completed covering approximately 80% of the provincial land
base. Our research to date has conducted a macro analysis of the
completed twenty-one plans (Frame et al. 2004). This paper reports on a
case study evaluation of a single land use planning process to provide a
more in-depth understanding of collaborative planning than is possible
in a macro analysis of twenty-one plans.
The paper begins with a description of collaborative planning. This
is followed by a description of the case study region and the planning
process. The evaluation methodology is then described, followed by
presentation of the research findings. Conclusions and implications for
planning are summarized.
Collaborative Planning
For most of the twentieth century, planning has been dominated by
the technocratic paradigm that defines planning as a process employing
experts who use objective scientific analysis to define optimal
strategies (Gunton and Day 2003, Susskind et al. 2000). In the 1960s,
the technocratic model was criticized for its failure to recognize that
planning was based on diverse values that could not be derived by
science and that there was no optimal or correct plan that could be
developed without incorporating the interests of stakeholders. The
criticism of technocratic planning was fueled by the growing protests of
stakeholders over expert-formulated plans in areas such as natural
resource management, environmental regulation, transportation, and urban
renewal, that were clearly contrary to the interests of large segments
of society.
Planning theory responded to the criticism by acknowledging the
role of goals and objectives identified through democratic political
processes to set the framework in which plans were prepared (Davidoff
1965, McLoughlin 1969). Experts in this new participatory environment
were relegated to determining optimal means to achieve politically set
goals. The unresolved question in this new goals-based planning theory
was how the goals should be determined. The initial and somewhat vague
response was that goals should be determined by citizen participation in
the planning process. But how should the participation be structured?
In the 1970s and 1980s several planning models emerged that
specifically defined how citizens should be engaged to define planning
goals. The most common approach was to consult stakeholders during plan
preparation by seeking feedback through public meetings and public
comment. Another model, termed advocacy planning, proposed that citizens
should hire their own experts who would prepare plans and act as
advocates for different stakeholder groups much the same way as lawyers
representing clients (Davidoff 1965). The problem with advocacy
planning, however, was that it did not provide a framework for resolving
disputes among competing interest groups. A third model, often referred
to as alternative dispute resolution, also emerged as a way of engaging
stakeholders in the development of plans by allowing stakeholders to
negotiate a consensus agreement to resolve the dispute (Bacow and
Wheeler 1984, Susskind and Cruikshank 1987). The problem with
alternative dispute resolution is that it is reactive in responding to
disputes that have already arisen instead of proactive. This limits its
effectiveness as a planning tool.
Collaborative planning, which emerged as a distinct planning
paradigm in the 1990s, is a logical extension of alternative dispute
resolution (Gunton and Day 2003). Most discussions of collaborative
planning rely on Gray's (1985: 912) definition of the concept
underlying collaboration as "the pooling of appreciations and/or
tangible resources, e.g. information, money, labor, etc., by two or more
stakeholders to solve a set of problems which neither can solve
individually." Within this concept, different terms are used to
describe various kinds of collaborative planning including: partnerships
(Selin and Chavez 1993, Moote et al. 1997, Wondolleck and Yaffee 1994);
mediation (Susskind et al. 2000); community-based planning (Moote et al.
2000); consensus building (Innis and Booher 1999); shared
decision-making (Gunton and Day 2003); and co-management (Rao and
Geisler 1990). A central feature in all these collaborative models is
the engagement of stakeholders in the development of plans (Gunton and
Day 2003, Conley and Moote 2003, Selin and Chavez 1995). More
specifically, we define collaborative planning as the delegation of
responsibility to prepare and implement plans to a stakeholder group
representing all relevant interests that uses consensus-based
negotiation to reach agreement. Normally, collaborative planning will
use a facilitator, interest-based negotiation techniques, consensus
rules for agreement, and joint fact finding to develop plans that are
then recommended to statutory agencies that retain final approval
authority.
Advocates of collaborative planning cite many advantages of the
collaborative model relative to other models of planning (Gunton and Day
2003, Wondelleck and Yaffee 2000, Susskind et al. 2000, Selin and Chavez
1995). Key advantages include: increased likelihood of developing a plan
that is in the public interest because the plan incorporates the
interests of all affected parties; increased likelihood of
implementation because all affected interests support the plan; and
generation of "social capital" such as improved stakeholder
relations and improved stakeholder knowledge that provide long-term
benefits to society. Advocates and critics also identify limitations to
collaborative planning including: limited applicability to only those
cases where all relevant stakeholders are motivated to participate
and/or management agencies are willing to delegate power; high cost in
time and resources; inequality in power that gives some stakeholders an
unfair advantage; propensity to develop second best or vague outcomes in
order to achieve consensus agreements; and lack of an underlying
theoretical foundation.
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