Problems with Ecosystem Management
The lengthy and ongoing struggle to manage federal forests over the last 20 years has taught managers many characteristics of the ecosystem management problem (Rauscher 1999).
- First, societal goals, preferences, and values are numerous, ambiguous, and often in conflict.
- Second, legal mandates are complex, unclear, and at times self-contradictory.
- Third, policy direction is missing, ambiguous, or incomplete with a tendency to rapidly shift in response to political pressure.
- Fourth, no well-defined and widely accepted decision-making process exists. Decisions and the decision-making process are usually based on trial-and-error methods and local, pragmatic inventions of necessity.
- Fifth, participating decision makers and stakeholders vary in the amount of time and effort they contribute to any one decision while engaging only sporadically in the decision-making process.
- Sixth, no widely accepted method is available for producing concensus among often contentious stakeholders. Individuals or small minorities have the power to block decisions at any time through judicial challenges resulting in managerial gridlock.
- Seventh, decisions must be made about actions and their consequences based on missing and uncertain data, and often inaccessible scientific knowledge about ecosystems.
- Finally, the ecosystem management problem is not as much about science as it is about politics (
Rittel 1972 ;Grumbine 1994 ). The ecosystem management debate is a competitive, conflict-laden social process that determines how power flows in resource management (Grumbine 1994 ; Chase, 1995; Rauscher 1999).
Clearly ecosystem management is a `wicked or unstructured problem as defined by Rittel and Webber (1973) and introduced to forestry by Allen and Gould (1986). `Wicked is used here in the sense of tricky, complex, and thorny. Wicked problems have no definitively correct formulations. Stake-holders can define the problem on their own terms. Any one definition can only be more or less useful depending upon the definition of useful. Wicked problems have no stopping rule to identify when they are `solved. Solutions are not true or false, but good or bad (ethical) and the only way to test the goodness or badness of solutions is to execute them. Wicked problems do not have an enumerable or an exhaustively describable set of potential solutions. Since they tend to be important with significant consequences, decision makers have no right to be wrong, making the decision process intensely agonizing and usually frustrating (
Understanding the dynamics of public preferences, conflict management and resolution, and cost evaluation and containment as it relates to ecosystem management is critically important. Defining and understanding stakeholders and their preferences is an important part of ecosystem management (
People educated in modern universities tend to think that there are rational solutions to every conflict. The evidence for such "solutions" is lacking. The ancient-forest controversy (old growth) is not likely to be "solved." It can be brought to a state of impasse, temporary resolution, quiescence, or neglect. The controversy over old-growth forests has an almost unbelievable number of dimensions. It covers: long- and short-term goals, regional and national goals, personal and local goals, animal versus tree impacts, trees as things of beauty with metaphysical benefits versus trees as the raw material for industrial stability and personal financial well-being and employment. There are factual disputes over local financial gains from log experts, disputes over whether industrial closures and layoff have been due to technology, or industrial organization, or due to closing land to logging. There are factual debates about the ancient forest acreage available. Debate continues over the ability to log those areas left and the likely quality of harvested wood. (Giles)
Currently, the dominant means of settling public land disputes have been either litigation or quasi-judicial administrative appeals. Such contentious methods of handling disputes expend much goodwill, energy, time, and money. These methods produce winners and losers, may leave fundamental differences unresolved, and potentially please few or none of the parties (
Ecosystem management cost evaluation and containment is a critical area for economists to study. As a general rule, increases in problem complexity and the degree of wickedness increase the cost of finding satisfactory solutions (
In the last century of federal forestland management, timber harvesting has largely paid for multiple-use management activities. Many forecast that the level of timber harvesting under ecosystem management will greatly decline while the cost of ecosystem management will greatly increase. Until managers evaluate the true cost and benefits, it will be difficult to determine whether the public is willing to pay for ecosystem management programs. In any case, a new and rational means of capital resource allocation will be required to fund the ecosystem management process adopted (
- Botkin, Daniel B. 1990. Discordant Harmonies. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. 241 p.
- Howard, T. E.; Chase, W. E. 1995. Maine stumpage prices: characteristics and trends from 1963 to 1990. Forest-Products-Journal. 45: 31-36; 13 ref.
- Kennedy, Harvey. 1993. Artificial Regeneration of Bottomland Oaks. In: David Loftis and Charles McGee , eds. The Proceedings of the Oak Regeneration: Serious Problem - Practical Recommendations Symposium. Asheville, NC: Southeastern Forest Experiment Station: 241-249.
- Rauscher, H. M. 1999. Ecosystem management decision support for federal forests in the United States. Forest Ecology and Management. 114: 173-197.
- Smith,Jane Kapler;Fischer,William C. 1997. Fire ecology of the forest habitat types of northern Idaho. Ogden,UT: U.S.Department of Agriculture,Forest Service,Intermountain Research Station. Gen.Tech.Rep.INT-GTR-363. 142 p p.
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