Authors
André F van Rooyen, Martin Moyo, Henning Bjornlund, Thabani Dube, Karen Parry, Richard Stirzaker
Publication date
2020/10/1
Journal
International Journal of Water Resources Development
Volume
36
Issue
sup1
Pages
S171-S198
Publisher
Routledge
Description
This article explores the value of Ostrom’s socio-ecological systems framework and Meadows’s leverage point hierarchy, as structured diagnostics, to define systemic problems and avoid approaches based on linear thinking. These frameworks were applied as an ex post analysis of an irrigation scheme in Zimbabwe, drawing on the scheme’s baseline condition and the intervention outcomes. Strong leverage points, particularly those driving feedback mechanisms and institutional design, interacted with other intervention points, initiating systemic change. This analysis suggests that dysfunctional schemes can be transitioned towards complex adaptive systems by using agricultural innovation platforms to identify systemic challenges and intervention points.
Total citations
2020202120222023202456874
Scholar articles
AF van Rooyen, M Moyo, H Bjornlund, T Dube, K Parry… - International Journal of Water Resources Development, 2020