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SEI brief

How Understanding Social Networks Can Help to Govern the Nexus: a Case from the Blue Nile Basin

This discussion brief is based on a scoping study of social networks linked to the governance of water, energy and food in the Tana and Beles basins in Ethiopia. The study highlights existing social networks relevant for governing the nexus and the implications of these for operationalizing a nexus approach.

Christian Stein / Published on 14 October 2013
Citation

Stein, C. (2013). How Understanding Social Networks Can Help to Govern the Nexus: a Case from the Blue Nile Basin.

A nexus approach can offer multiple gains, but only if there is meaningful collaboration across sectors and administrative boundaries. This study found that, in Ethiopia, relationships in the networks appear instead to follow administrative and sectorial boundaries.

To address nexus problems at a single system boundary limits the possibility to find truly comprehensive solutions. In order to implement a nexus approach, there is a need for organizational arrangements that cut across hydrological, political and sectorial boundaries.

Building on and strengthening existing organizational relations can be an important prerequisite for more coordinated decision-making. A better understanding of existing organizational structures – an understanding that social network analysis can offer – including their strength and weaknesses, is critical to the implementation of a nexus approach.

Download the discussion brief (PDF, 1.1MB)

 

 

 

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Topics and subtopics
Water : Water-Energy-Food Nexus
Regions
Ethiopia

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