Mountain Research and Development (May 2021)

Challenges for Governing Mountains Sustainably: Insights From a Global Survey

  • Catherine M. Tucker,
  • Irasema Alcántara-Ayala,
  • Alexey Gunya,
  • Elizabeth Jimenez,
  • Julia A. Klein,
  • Jun Xu,
  • Sophie Lena Bigler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1659/MRD-JOURNAL-D-20-00080.1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 41, no. 2
pp. R10 – R20

Abstract

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Governance is increasingly recognized as key to sustainability and human wellbeing in mountain social–ecological systems (MtSES). Mountains present particular challenges for effective governance related to their geographic complexities, status as commons, susceptibility to environmental change, and impacts of external political and socioeconomic processes. This study reports on the results of a global survey of local mountain governance. It explored a range of known governance challenges to discover which are most prevalent and whether relative strength of local governance helps to mitigate these challenges. The study analyzed 75 survey responses across 5 continents from researchers and practitioners who work on mountain governance. Major challenges for governance included contradictory policies, poverty, and the presence of valuable nonrenewable natural resources. Compared with sites with stronger local governance, those with weaker arrangements reported significantly greater prevalence of certain challenges, such as corruption. Yet many challenges did not differ significantly by strength of local governance, implicating external factors instead. This finding points to a need to improve governance across levels to support MtSES sustainability.

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