Description

Book Synopsis
This book determines that watershed protection and restoration in the 21st century requires adaptive and responsive strategies that incorporate regulatory frameworks in conjunction with community stakeholder engagement. The severity and pervasiveness of watershed pollution require building resource capacity through the formation of multi-sector strategic alliances. Given the complexities of watershed management and the need to leverage resources to achieve better environmental outcomes, understanding the role of motivations in watershed collaboration is vital to the efficacy of watershed protection and restoration endeavors. The authors use an in-depth case study to investigate the social processes and the motivations that drive organizations operating within a shared local watershed to voluntarily direct their resources and participate in watershed collaboration.

Trade Review
In a time of increasingly scarce resources and unpredictable climate change, the management of a healthy watershed depends on the partnership between an array of public and private actors. Diaz-Kope and Morris explore these linkages and fill a critical need in the literature by offering insight into how and why sectoral differences influence motivation to collaborate in watershed management. The result is a substantial examination of watershed management collaboration that will undoubtedly be of interest to scholars, students, and those interested in the preservation of some of our nation’s most fragile resources. -- Martin Mayer, University of North Carolina at Pembroke
Organizational Motivation for Collaboration: Theory and Evidence provides a nuanced understanding of the organizational motivations that drive collaboration in the case of the LynnHaven River, VA watershed. This in-depth study adds value to research and practice in the challenging policy area of non-point source water pollution. Its unique focus on the differences in perspective across public, private and nonprofit sector organizations distinguishes this approach from other work on watershed collaboration. -- Christine Reed, emeritus, University of Nebraska-Omaha

Table of Contents
1 Why Organizational Collaboration Matters 2 Theories of Organizational Motivation 3 The Setting: Lynnhaven River NOW 4 Organizational Motivations in Watershed Cross-Sector Collaboration 5 Implications for Practitioners and Researchers

Organizational Motivation for Collaboration

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 20 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Old Dominion University Morris John C., John C. Morris

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      View other formats and editions of Organizational Motivation for Collaboration by Old Dominion University Morris John C.

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 1/25/2019 12:09:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498578523, 978-1498578523
      ISBN10: 1498578527

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book determines that watershed protection and restoration in the 21st century requires adaptive and responsive strategies that incorporate regulatory frameworks in conjunction with community stakeholder engagement. The severity and pervasiveness of watershed pollution require building resource capacity through the formation of multi-sector strategic alliances. Given the complexities of watershed management and the need to leverage resources to achieve better environmental outcomes, understanding the role of motivations in watershed collaboration is vital to the efficacy of watershed protection and restoration endeavors. The authors use an in-depth case study to investigate the social processes and the motivations that drive organizations operating within a shared local watershed to voluntarily direct their resources and participate in watershed collaboration.

      Trade Review
      In a time of increasingly scarce resources and unpredictable climate change, the management of a healthy watershed depends on the partnership between an array of public and private actors. Diaz-Kope and Morris explore these linkages and fill a critical need in the literature by offering insight into how and why sectoral differences influence motivation to collaborate in watershed management. The result is a substantial examination of watershed management collaboration that will undoubtedly be of interest to scholars, students, and those interested in the preservation of some of our nation’s most fragile resources. -- Martin Mayer, University of North Carolina at Pembroke
      Organizational Motivation for Collaboration: Theory and Evidence provides a nuanced understanding of the organizational motivations that drive collaboration in the case of the LynnHaven River, VA watershed. This in-depth study adds value to research and practice in the challenging policy area of non-point source water pollution. Its unique focus on the differences in perspective across public, private and nonprofit sector organizations distinguishes this approach from other work on watershed collaboration. -- Christine Reed, emeritus, University of Nebraska-Omaha

      Table of Contents
      1 Why Organizational Collaboration Matters 2 Theories of Organizational Motivation 3 The Setting: Lynnhaven River NOW 4 Organizational Motivations in Watershed Cross-Sector Collaboration 5 Implications for Practitioners and Researchers

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