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Key Questions to Explore at AWS’s Global Water Stewardship Forum 2017

AWS Global Water Forum

Ten plus years into the evolution of water stewardship there are several key issues that we as a community of practice need to crack. The Alliance for Water Stewardship’s Global Water Stewardship Forum offers a space to focus our collective minds on these.

In ‘Who’s doing what kind of water stewardship, where?’, Alexis Morgan, Water Stewardship Lead for WWF and Alliance for Water Stewardship (AWS) Board Member, presented a visualisation of the place-based water stewardship activity undertaken by several stewardship organisations, including 2030 Water Resources Group, AWS, CEO Water Mandate, International Water Stewardship Programme (IWaSP), and WWF. His post served as a précis to a session our organisations were collectively convening at this year’s Stockholm World Water Week entitled ‘Water Stewardship – Different ways but same objectives.

The objectives of our session were to present a shared vision of how water stewardship is contributing to water security on the ground, to highlight the opportunity for further collaboration between our respective organisations and, most importantly, to catalyse fresh engagement in stewardship that will facilitate greater and deeper collaboration between the local stakeholders from business, the public sector and civil society that each of us convenes.

Returning from Stockholm, and reflecting on that event and the other stewardship-related sessions, we have some key take-aways:

In truth, our session could have been several hours longer. Even so, it would still only have scratched the surface of both the work that is happening and the questions we collectively need to answer to drive impact and scale. The same could be said of the several water stewardship sub-themed sessions held over the course of World Water Week.

The proliferation of these sessions – combined with the emergence of new territories and new sectors highlighted by the Mandate in their annual meeting – suggest that water stewardship is undergoing a step change in adoption. With expansion of scale and scope, more context is added, which in turn brings more questions. These add greater urgency to what we at AWS colloquially term the ‘Big Issues’.

These issues are the key questions that we believe our multi-stakeholder community must answer if we are to drive greater engagement, including unlocking the investment needs highlighted earlier. This shift from ‘unknown unknowns’ to ‘known unknowns’ includes:

Our staff, members, partners, and stakeholders don’t have the answers to these issues, but we are keen to find them. The purpose of this post is to invite you to join us in this.

The 2017 AWS Global Water Stewardship Forum takes place in Edinburgh, Scotland on October 31st and November 1st. Our aim is to foster a collegial atmosphere where diverse stakeholders can debate, learn and evolve our ongoing practice. Powerpoints and presentations are kept to a minimum, facilitating an open dialogue between panelists and delegate participants. The outcomes of last year’s multi-stakeholder discussions can be viewed here.

AWS believes that to tackle the Big Issues in water stewardship we need a multiplicity of experiences and perspectives sharing, questioning, and collaborating. If you have opinions and evidence to share, please consider registering for the Forum. Alternatively, if you are unable to make it, you can mail me your views on any of the topics listed and they’ll be shared from the floor – my contact details are below. And if you want to know the outcomes, sign up for the AWS Newsletter – we’ll be mailing the lessons learned shortly after the Forum.

Scott McCready
Alliance for Water Stewardship
Director of Outreach & Engagement

Email: scott@a4ws.org
Twitter: @_A4WS

 

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