Literature DB >> 21431779

Absorptive capacity as a guiding concept for effective public sector management and conservation of freshwater ecosystems.

K Murray1, D J Roux, J L Nel, A Driver, W Freimund.   

Abstract

The ability of an organisation to recognise the value of new external information, acquire it, assimilate it, transform, and exploit it, namely its absorptive capacity (AC), has been much researched in the context of commercial organisations and even applied to national innovation. This paper considers four key AC-related concepts and their relevance to public sector organisations with mandates to manage and conserve freshwater ecosystems for the common good. The concepts are the importance of in-house prior related knowledge, the importance of informal knowledge transfer, the need for motivation and intensity of effort, and the importance of gatekeepers. These concepts are used to synthesise guidance for a way forward in respect of such freshwater management and conservation, using the imminent release of a specific scientific conservation planning and management tool in South Africa as a case study. The tool comprises a comprehensive series of maps that depict national freshwater ecosystem priority areas for South Africa. Insights for implementing agencies relate to maintaining an internal science, rather than research capacity; making unpublished and especially tacit knowledge available through informal knowledge transfer; not underestimating the importance of intensity of effort required to create AC, driven by focussed motivation; and the potential use of a gatekeeper at national level (external to the implementing organisations), possibly playing a more general 'bridging' role, and multiple internal (organisational) gatekeepers playing the more limited role of 'knowledge translators'. The role of AC as a unifying framework is also proposed.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21431779     DOI: 10.1007/s00267-011-9659-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Manage        ISSN: 0364-152X            Impact factor:   3.266


  4 in total

1.  Building a learning organization.

Authors:  D A Garvin
Journal:  Harv Bus Rev       Date:  1993 Jul-Aug

2.  Adaptive capacity and community-based natural resource management.

Authors:  Derek Armitage
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2005-06       Impact factor: 3.266

3.  Improving cross-sector policy integration and cooperation in support of freshwater conservation.

Authors:  Dirk J Roux; Peter J Ashton; Jeanne L Nel; Heather M Mackay
Journal:  Conserv Biol       Date:  2008-10-20       Impact factor: 6.560

Review 4.  Knowing but not doing: selecting priority conservation areas and the research-implementation gap.

Authors:  Andrew T Knight; Richard M Cowling; Mathieu Rouget; Andrew Balmford; Amanda T Lombard; Bruce M Campbell
Journal:  Conserv Biol       Date:  2008-05-09       Impact factor: 6.560

  4 in total
  1 in total

1.  The role and value of conservation agency research.

Authors:  Dirk J Roux; Richard T Kingsford; Stephen F McCool; Melodie A McGeoch; Llewellyn C Foxcroft
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2015-04-04       Impact factor: 3.266

  1 in total

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