<p>In recent years, studies on fire governance have gained momentum, stressing that, besides technical fire management solutions, it is necessary to consider the array of stakeholders involved in this issue, including local communities. Some recent studies have suggested the need to go beyond superficial stakeholder classifications, considering nuances within stakeholder groups. The present paper adds to this discussion, highlighting the diversity of approaches, their spatial differences and temporal changes among stakeholders involved in fire governance of the La Sepultura Biosphere Reserve, a major wildfire hotspot in southern Mexico. It considers previous research alongside new information from 34 semi-structured expert interviews and fieldwork using ethnographic methods. The data are analysed within an environmental governance framework, considering qualitative social network analysis and inputs from political ecology studies. The results present a complex structure of differences in approaches and objectives that lie beyond established boundaries between stakeholder groups and classical dualities, such as between local communities and governmental agencies. The study also documents obstacles to effective stakeholder cooperation and provides some evidence on how these can be overcome. The framework developed here is relevant to other areas with similar wildfire challenges to enable a systematic revision of stakeholder roles in fire governance.</p>

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Spatio-Temporal Dynamics and Diversity of Approaches in Multiscale Fire Governance

  • Christoph Neger,
  • Octavio Romero-Cuapio,
  • Nancy Maitrett-Bautista,
  • Andrea Cruz-Martínez

摘要

In recent years, studies on fire governance have gained momentum, stressing that, besides technical fire management solutions, it is necessary to consider the array of stakeholders involved in this issue, including local communities. Some recent studies have suggested the need to go beyond superficial stakeholder classifications, considering nuances within stakeholder groups. The present paper adds to this discussion, highlighting the diversity of approaches, their spatial differences and temporal changes among stakeholders involved in fire governance of the La Sepultura Biosphere Reserve, a major wildfire hotspot in southern Mexico. It considers previous research alongside new information from 34 semi-structured expert interviews and fieldwork using ethnographic methods. The data are analysed within an environmental governance framework, considering qualitative social network analysis and inputs from political ecology studies. The results present a complex structure of differences in approaches and objectives that lie beyond established boundaries between stakeholder groups and classical dualities, such as between local communities and governmental agencies. The study also documents obstacles to effective stakeholder cooperation and provides some evidence on how these can be overcome. The framework developed here is relevant to other areas with similar wildfire challenges to enable a systematic revision of stakeholder roles in fire governance.