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Enabling a community of practice: participatory practices in building a water-sensitive catchment

This study explores the conditions for an enabling environment that lends itself to a more inclusive, relational, value-framing approach to nature and biodiversity in the field of urban water management. There are increasing calls in water governance for a better understanding of how participatory p...

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Main Author: Bennett, Andrew
Other Authors: Winter, Kevin
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Bennett, Andrew
author2 Winter, Kevin
author_browse Bennett, Andrew
Winter, Kevin
author_facet Winter, Kevin
Bennett, Andrew
author_sort Bennett, Andrew
collection Thesis
description This study explores the conditions for an enabling environment that lends itself to a more inclusive, relational, value-framing approach to nature and biodiversity in the field of urban water management. There are increasing calls in water governance for a better understanding of how participatory processes can be designed and structured to accommodate a range of stakeholders and achieve sustained public value. Although local governments are making progress in establishing formal community participation strategies, the overall engagement undertaken often informs citizens rather than involving them, thus limiting the input from different actors. Literature suggests that by fostering landscapes of communities of practice (CoPs), governments can enable more effective cooperation, interrelationships, and datadriven feedback loops between public authorities and communities that leads to effective policy- and decision-making. In CoPs theory, the notion of a ‘community' does not refer to the traditional sense of a friendly, harmonious, and bounded group but rather expresses the strength of voluntary, informal, authentic relationships between participants where a sense of belonging is an accomplishment. The rise of CoPs also reflects new societal dynamics in which citizens are more willing and able to be involved in or initiate the processes of policy formulation, implementation, and service delivery. Drawing on the work of the Friends of Liesbeek (FOL) - a community-based organisation (CBO) stewarding the Liesbeek River in Cape Town for over 30 years - the overall aim of this research was to understand how a CoP is initiated, developed, and sustained. The research design was a deductive thematic analysis, using social learning and CoPs theory to interpret the engagements and activities of FOL. The study attempts to show how the natural relational process of social learning spaces (CoPs) can improve the effectiveness of participation across different scales and sectors (from local to global) in the water domain. Although not without its limitations, a CoPs approach offers the potential to address complex water challenges by overcoming situations where state and nonstate actors continue to work independently from each other and do not sufficiently share, adopt, and implement solutions that work in practice and can be replicated at scale. Examples of CBOs, such as FOL, illustrate that ordinary citizens can and do play a critical role in managing water resources at local level and shaping water governance and policy.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:17.361Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
publisherStr Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41471 Enabling a community of practice: participatory practices in building a water-sensitive catchment Bennett, Andrew Winter, Kevin Geographical Science This study explores the conditions for an enabling environment that lends itself to a more inclusive, relational, value-framing approach to nature and biodiversity in the field of urban water management. There are increasing calls in water governance for a better understanding of how participatory processes can be designed and structured to accommodate a range of stakeholders and achieve sustained public value. Although local governments are making progress in establishing formal community participation strategies, the overall engagement undertaken often informs citizens rather than involving them, thus limiting the input from different actors. Literature suggests that by fostering landscapes of communities of practice (CoPs), governments can enable more effective cooperation, interrelationships, and datadriven feedback loops between public authorities and communities that leads to effective policy- and decision-making. In CoPs theory, the notion of a ‘community' does not refer to the traditional sense of a friendly, harmonious, and bounded group but rather expresses the strength of voluntary, informal, authentic relationships between participants where a sense of belonging is an accomplishment. The rise of CoPs also reflects new societal dynamics in which citizens are more willing and able to be involved in or initiate the processes of policy formulation, implementation, and service delivery. Drawing on the work of the Friends of Liesbeek (FOL) - a community-based organisation (CBO) stewarding the Liesbeek River in Cape Town for over 30 years - the overall aim of this research was to understand how a CoP is initiated, developed, and sustained. The research design was a deductive thematic analysis, using social learning and CoPs theory to interpret the engagements and activities of FOL. The study attempts to show how the natural relational process of social learning spaces (CoPs) can improve the effectiveness of participation across different scales and sectors (from local to global) in the water domain. Although not without its limitations, a CoPs approach offers the potential to address complex water challenges by overcoming situations where state and nonstate actors continue to work independently from each other and do not sufficiently share, adopt, and implement solutions that work in practice and can be replicated at scale. Examples of CBOs, such as FOL, illustrate that ordinary citizens can and do play a critical role in managing water resources at local level and shaping water governance and policy. 2025-06-23T13:04:20Z 2025-06-23T13:04:20Z 2025 2025-06-23T12:54:35Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41471 Eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science University of Cape town
spellingShingle Geographical Science
Bennett, Andrew
Enabling a community of practice: participatory practices in building a water-sensitive catchment
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Enabling a community of practice: participatory practices in building a water-sensitive catchment
title_full Enabling a community of practice: participatory practices in building a water-sensitive catchment
title_fullStr Enabling a community of practice: participatory practices in building a water-sensitive catchment
title_full_unstemmed Enabling a community of practice: participatory practices in building a water-sensitive catchment
title_short Enabling a community of practice: participatory practices in building a water-sensitive catchment
title_sort enabling a community of practice participatory practices in building a water sensitive catchment
topic Geographical Science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41471
work_keys_str_mv AT bennettandrew enablingacommunityofpracticeparticipatorypracticesinbuildingawatersensitivecatchment