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Mastering the Middle: The transactional role of stewardship organizations in post-Sandy New York Presentation for The Urban Environmental Stewardship Conference.

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Presentation on theme: "Mastering the Middle: The transactional role of stewardship organizations in post-Sandy New York Presentation for The Urban Environmental Stewardship Conference."— Presentation transcript:

1 Mastering the Middle: The transactional role of stewardship organizations in post-Sandy New York Presentation for The Urban Environmental Stewardship Conference University of Maryland Program for Society and Environment April 17, 2015 NYC Stewardship Network, 2010 Hurricane Sandy, 2012 James JT Connolly Assistant Professor Northeastern University School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs Dept. of Political Science

2 1. Background: Stewardship and NYC STEW MAP 2. Current Study: Post Sandy Resilience 3. Analysis: Mixed Methods 4. Findings: 2 Main Points 5. Conclusion Agenda BackgroundCurrent StudyFindingsAnalysis Conclusion

3 Stewardship and Ecosystem Services AgendaBackgroundFindingsAnalysis Conclusion Current Study Urban environmental stewards conserve, manage, monitor, advocate for, or educate the public about the local environment (Fisher et al. 2007).

4 STEW-MAP ~Sent survey to 2,767 groups that perform a stewardship function ~Questions focused on stewardship activities, org characteristics, geography, and networks ~572 Responses (20%) ~ 316 (11%) civic groups with valid network data AgendaBackgroundFindingsAnalysis Conclusion Current Study

5 Transactive “Bridges” in Civic Networks 2. Social-Ecological Resilience Social structures that lead to resilient social-ecological systems are flexible (adaptive to change) and work across multiple scales. Cross-scale brokers that create bridging capacity are essential to building resilience. Ernstson et al. (2010) AgendaBackgroundCurrent StudyFindingsAnalysis Conclusion 1. Civic Organizational Networks Dense clusters of strong “bonding” ties connected by fewer instrumental “bridging” ties. The organizations that create transactive bridges across the networks are essential in determining overall civic capacity. Baldassari and Diani (2007)

6 Identify and Analyze Bridge Organizations Stewardship organizations 2 standard deviations or above with number of “in-degree” ties and betweenness N=704, with 316 respondents (11% of all stewardship groups) AgendaBackgroundCurrent StudyFindingsAnalysis Conclusion

7 Post-Sandy Study AgendaBackgroundCurrent StudyFindingsAnalysis Conclusion

8 Social Resilience 1.Vulnerability and social isolation lower organizational capacity leads to higher levels of social isolation and lower resilience for neighborhoods Klinenberg (1999, 2001, 2003) 2. Urban Politics Networks do not overcome power asymmetries Pelling (2003) Cote and Nightingale (2012) AgendaBackgroundCurrent StudyFindingsAnalysis Conclusion

9 Research Questions Did the transactional role of bridge stewardship organizations increase citywide resilience in the wake of Hurricane Sandy? Did these groups mitigate social isolation and power asymmetries? AgendaBackgroundCurrent StudyFindingsAnalysis Conclusion

10 Qualitative Interviews with Bridge Organizations ~22 Semi Structured Interviews (14 Pre- and 8 Post-Hurricane Sandy) ~Interviews lasted approximately 1 hour ~Questions focused on who they worked with and in what capacity Topics 1. History 2. Economy 3. Geography 4. Activities 5. Organizational Networks 6. Preparation 7. Funding AgendaBackgroundCurrent StudyFindingsAnalysis Conclusion

11 Immediate response: Targeted according to existing network connections “What we ended up doing was getting a list of all of our 140 local partner groups … So we looked at that list, we divided it up by area code, figured out what was needed.” “We would give money to those groups that [had worked with us before but] were kind of secondary but helping the groups that were actually working on the rebuilding effort and just a few weeks after Sandy.” AgendaBackgroundCurrent StudyFindingsAnalysis Conclusion

12 AgendaBackgroundCurrent StudyFindingsAnalysis Conclusion Immediate response: No redundancy in social infrastructure for vulnerable areas

13 Transactive Role Changes Over Time: Strong mid- to long-term response AgendaBackgroundFindingsAnalysis Conclusion A. Transform the green infrastructure supported by local groups: “[We created] this emergency grant program post Sandy … And then … a lot more environmental trends came out like more groups wanting to build bioswale projects. Trying to prepare for the storm water runoff. Groups trying to protect their public spaces in the Sandy impacted areas.” “Now it’s more of a focus on how can we move forward and build the resilience of the city. So we’re not just improving what was already there, but also looking to the future and thinking about how we can protect ourselves from all different types of stresses that might happen.” Current Study

14 B. Address uneven concentration of institutional resources: “There were several groups that came together for the first time after Sandy. Some groups we’d never heard of before…They’re not in [our normal] zones. And they’re coming to us saying, ‘We can do stuff, we’re going to help.’ We couldn’t turn them away.” “That’s one thing with all of our resilience programs have brought in a lot of new partners that we haven’t previously worked with. And I think resilience just in general and the post-Sandy arena it’s just shifted the direction of work for a lot of people.” AgendaBackgroundFindingsAnalysis Conclusion C. Some reduction of power asymmetries: “They were especially interested in places like Coney Island and… and the Rockaways, but, you know, any garden that got impacted by Sandy was much more attractive to these… corporations because then they can say, oh, yeah, we helped with Sandy recovery.” Current Study Transactive Role Changes Over Time: Strong mid- to long-term response

15 1. SOCIAL VULNERABILITY MEANS THAT RESIDENTS ONLY HAVE TOP-DOWN CENTRALIZED RESPONSE CAPACITY—NO SOCIAL REDUNDANCY 2. ROLE FOR TRANSACTIVE CAPACITY CHANGES OVER TIME A. IMMEDIATE Enhances immediate response capacity mostly in areas with existing connections B. MID-TERM Mitigates social isolation by adding organizational capacity to areas with thin social resilience C. LONG-TERM Address some power asymmetries by bringing new resources to marginalized areas AgendaBackgroundFindingsAnalysis Conclusion Current Study Conclusion


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