Inclusive hydrology: how to maximize participation and actionable
knowledge creation in water resources
Abstract
This year marks the centennial of the American Geophysical Union
advancing Earth and space science and 89 years of hydrologic science.
The last 100 years have seen science and technology dancing a harmonious
and progressively accelerated waltz. Hydroelectric power generation has
made widespread electrification possible, while the rise of electronics
and the advent of computers have enabled hydrologists to exploit
increasingly complex models. Scientists and engineers have conquered
space, and now satellite-based products and remotely sensed data have
become indispensable inputs for hydrometeorological forecasting. Yet
several important elements that have accompanied humanity’s history –
nature, culture, and people – have been relegated; and it is only very
recently, in the face of modern challenges, that they have attracted
substantial attention. The advent of robust, cheap, and low-maintenance
sensing equipment provides unprecedented opportunities for data
collection, especially in a citizen science context. While citizens have
been present throughout the history of scientific practice, developments
in sensing technology, data processing and visualization, and the
communication of ideas and results, are creating a wide range of new
opportunities for public participation in scientific research.
Integrating societal knowledge with hydrologic science, however, is not
only a task for the 21st century. Historically, many civilizations have
developed local water harvesting and management practices that cope with
water stress by using ancient and nature-based knowledge. Indeed,
indigenous peoples developed solutions that were inspired and supported
by nature, and use, or mimic, natural processes to contribute to
improved water management and to safeguard their water security.
Technological development and knowledge integration also have a more
fundamental impact on the way in which hydrologic knowledge advances,
how it flows between different actors, how it disrupts power relations,
and thus how it influences decisions and policy-making. We envisage
that, in the next century, hydrologic science will benefit from
co-creating knowledge that emerges from citizens, resonates with nature,
and integrates ancient wisdom.