Litcius/Paper detail

The conceptual basis of water-energy-food nexus governance: systematic literature review using network and discourse analysis

Alberto Matenhauer Urbinatti, Lira Luz Benites Lázaro, Carolina Monteiro de Carvalho, Leandro Luiz Giatti

2020Journal of Integrative Environmental Sciences96 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In the last decade, the debate on the governance of water, energy, and food (WEF) has intensified, spurring the emergence of the term “nexus governance.” In general, the reduction of trade-offs and construction of synergies between WEF have been placed on the scientific, political, and economic agenda. However, although increasingly used, it is difficult to find a clear meaning and definition of what the term represents. Based on a systematic literature review (SLR), using text-mining and machine learning algorithms, this article investigates what are the conceptual basis of the nexus governance debate, and attempts to clarify the main themes, networks, and gaps within this literature. The analysis is based on quantitative and qualitative methods, combining social network analysis (SNA) and discourse analysis (DA). The results highlighted that twenty-four governance-related concepts support this literature, breaking down into eight groups: water and basin governance; environmental and systems governance; risk and resource security governance; economic governance; global governance; urban governance; integrative and cooperative governance; and “epistemic” and transdisciplinary governance.

Topics & Concepts

Corporate governanceNexus (standard)Multi-level governanceProject governancePoliticsConceptual frameworkMeaning (existential)Political scienceEnvironmental resource managementSociologyEconomicsSocial scienceManagementEngineeringEpistemologyLawEmbedded systemPhilosophyWater-Energy-Food Nexus StudiesEnergy and Environment ImpactsWater Governance and Infrastructure