Most countries represented in COWAM 2 (Belgium, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Hungary, Netherlands, Romania, Spain, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom, as well as Japan and South Africa) are at a turning point of experimenting new approaches in decision-making around RWM. As the reports from each working group show (Section 2 of final report, www.cowam.com/spip.php?article71), COWAM 2 proposes tools and strategies for implementing inclusive governance in the RWM context.
Not least important is the fact that these results were achieved in a collaborative manner among participating actors. COWAM 2 indeed developed an innovative methodology of cooperative research, based on the structured involvement of stakeholders in the production of knowledge having a direct connection with their concerns and actions. It is a valuable outcome of COWAM 2 in the same way that the tools and strategies worked out by participants are valuable. The cooperative research approach, like the concrete COWAM 2 work package offerings, can be used again in new contexts to improve the governance of RWM or other societal risk management. Across three years of cooperative research to develop their tools and strategies, COWAM 2 participants identified the latest advances and best practices on three levels:
- Structuring local communities for engagement in RWM governance
- Legal and institutional frameworks for inclusive governance of RWM
- Sustainable and reliable governance of long term issues.
Indeed, the COWAM 2 research made it plain that RWG must be concerned with the local level (democratic structures and processes...), with the institutional level (organisations and formal instruments and processes, often national), and with the longterm dimension (the special constraints introduced by the very long periods associated with RWG). These three levels of different nature are interrelated, and they are all essential. Governance of RWG is indeed multi-level governance, and while different actors may be more specifically concerned with one level or one element, all actors should be aware of the full extent of this three-dimensional governance "space".