Effective risk governance for environmental policy making: a knowledge management perspective

Date

2014-05-24

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Publisher

Elsevier

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Article

ISSN

1462-9011

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Citation

Craig Mauelshagen, Mark Smith, Frank Schiller, David Denyer, Sophie Rocks, Simon Pollard, Effective risk governance for environmental policy making: a knowledge management perspective, Environmental Science & Policy, Volume 41, August 2014, Pages 23-32

Abstract

Effective risk management within environmental policy making requires knowledge on natural, economic and social systems to be integrated; knowledge characterised by complexity, uncertainty and ambiguity. We describe a case study in a (UK) central government department exploring how risk governance supports and hinders this challenging integration of knowledge. Forty-five semi-structured interviews were completed over a two year period. We found that lateral knowledge transfer between teams working on different policy areas was widely viewed as a key source of knowledge. However, the process of lateral knowledge transfer was predominantly informal and unsupported by risk governance structures. We argue this made decision quality vulnerable to a loss of knowledge through staff turnover, and time and resource pressures. Our conclusion is that the predominant form of risk governance framework, with its focus on centralised decision-making and vertical knowledge transfer is insufficient to support risk-based, environmental policy making. We discuss how risk governance can better support environmental policy makers through systematic knowledge management practices.

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Keywords

Environmental policy, Risk, Enterprise risk management, Knowledge management

Rights

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