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Wiley InterScience

Ground Water

Ground Water

Volume 46 Issue 2, Pages 174 - 182

Published Online: 11 Jan 2008

Journal compilation © 2010 National Ground Water Association



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Cooperative Modeling: Linking Science, Communication, and Ground Water Planning
Vincent C. Tidwell 1 Cors van den Brink 2
  2 Royal Haskoning, Groningen, The Netherlands; c.vandenbrink@royalhaskoning.com
Correspondence to   1 Sandia National Laboratories, P.O. Box 5800, MS 1350, Albuquerque, NM 87185; (505) 844-6025; vctidwe@sandia.gov
Copyright Journal compilation © 2008 National Ground Water Association

ABSTRACT

Equitable allocation of ground water resources is a growing challenge due to both the increasing demand for water and the competing values placed on its use. While scientists can contribute to a technically defensible basis for water resource planning, this framework must be cast in a broader societal and environmental context. Given the complexity and often contentious nature of resource allocation, success requires a process for inclusive and transparent sharing of ideas complemented by tools to structure, quantify, and visualize the collective understanding and data, providing an informed basis of dialogue, exploration, and decision making. Ideally, a process that promotes shared learning leading to cooperative and adaptive planning decisions. While variously named, mediated modeling, group modeling, cooperative modeling, shared vision planning, or computer-mediated collaborative decision making are similar approaches aimed at meeting these objectives. In this paper, we frame "cooperative modeling" in the context of ground water planning and illustrate the process with two brief examples.


Received April 2007, accepted September 2007.

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1745-6584.2007.00394.x About DOI

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