The Aquatic Invasion
Assembling Transboundary Governance Capacity for Prevention and Detection
Keywords:
Transboundary cooperation, Great Lakes, Aquatic invasive species, Institutions and networks, IndicatorsAbstract
This case examines the transboundary governance architecture for addressing the problem of
aquatic invasive species in the Great Lakes Basin. The analytical focus is on the contribution of
institutions and networks to transboundary cooperative capacity and the promotion of effective
working arrangements with respect to prevention and early detection. We utilize the four indicators
employed in this special issue – functional intensity, nature of compliance mechanisms,
stability and resilience and legitimacy – to assess the functions and operation of institutions and
networks. We find that the transboundary governance architecture for aquatic invasive species is
functionally intense, operating in the sphere of cooperation and often harmonization across both
informal networks and more formal institutions. This architecture also utilizes a range of compliance
mechanisms which have served to bring about greater harmonization of requirements, particularly
for preventing the introduction and transport of new invasive species around the Basin.
These efforts and activities are broadly seen as legitimate, due to concerted consensus-building
and public information campaigns conducted by the networks, as well as enhanced participation
in transboundary policy processes. The stability and resilience of this architecture, buoyed over
recent decades by institution-network connections, is however being undermined by ongoing
austerity measures.
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Copyright (c) 2016 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.