TY - JOUR
T1 - Participatory development of a bayesian network model for catchment-based water resource management
AU - Chan, Terence
AU - Ross, H
AU - Hoverman, S
AU - Powell, B
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - A participatory approach was used to develop a Bayesian network model for assisting integration of water resource management in the Kongulai catchment in the Solomon Islands. This catchment provides 40-60 of the water for Honiara, the capital, and management is complex, with sparse data and many competing uses including drinking, domestic, agricultural and industrial uses for both water and land in the catchment, as well as a range of threats from pollution, increasing population, changing land-use and variable hydrogeology. There are socio-economic considerations including customary landownership and overlapping institutional responsibilities. A participatory process involving representative stakeholders of three main groups, the customary landowners, the government, and non-governmental organizations, was central to analyzing the system, building trust in the model development process and model outcomes, and additionally facilitated relationship building between the different groups affecting, and affected by, the catchment. A conceptual model of the Kongulai system with respect to water was developed with all stakeholders. Further elicitation of quantitative aspects took place with a subset of water management professionals, for development into a working Bayesian network model. Stakeholder representatives were then presented with the model, some analysis and scenarios for discussion and feedback. The model provided a number of recommendations that support local management decision-making and were accepted by the wider stakeholder group. The process demonstrates the worth of a well designed participatory approach to enhance stakeholder contributions, and confirms the appropriateness of Bayesian networks for use in developing country contexts where capacity and data may be scarce.
AB - A participatory approach was used to develop a Bayesian network model for assisting integration of water resource management in the Kongulai catchment in the Solomon Islands. This catchment provides 40-60 of the water for Honiara, the capital, and management is complex, with sparse data and many competing uses including drinking, domestic, agricultural and industrial uses for both water and land in the catchment, as well as a range of threats from pollution, increasing population, changing land-use and variable hydrogeology. There are socio-economic considerations including customary landownership and overlapping institutional responsibilities. A participatory process involving representative stakeholders of three main groups, the customary landowners, the government, and non-governmental organizations, was central to analyzing the system, building trust in the model development process and model outcomes, and additionally facilitated relationship building between the different groups affecting, and affected by, the catchment. A conceptual model of the Kongulai system with respect to water was developed with all stakeholders. Further elicitation of quantitative aspects took place with a subset of water management professionals, for development into a working Bayesian network model. Stakeholder representatives were then presented with the model, some analysis and scenarios for discussion and feedback. The model provided a number of recommendations that support local management decision-making and were accepted by the wider stakeholder group. The process demonstrates the worth of a well designed participatory approach to enhance stakeholder contributions, and confirms the appropriateness of Bayesian networks for use in developing country contexts where capacity and data may be scarce.
UR - http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2010/2009WR008848.shtml
U2 - 10.1029/2009WR008848
DO - 10.1029/2009WR008848
M3 - Article
SN - 0043-1397
VL - 46
SP - 1
EP - 12
JO - Water Resources Research
JF - Water Resources Research
ER -