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University of Maryland, College Park

Co-Production: Addressing Complexity with Environmental Adaptive Management

University of Maryland, College Park and University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science via edX

Overview

This course explores adaptive leadership and collaborative management for complex environmental projects, moving beyond traditional "top-down" approaches. It equips participants with strategies to drive sustainable outcomes through empowered teams, stakeholder engagement, and iterative decision-making in distributed environments.

Key Themes

Modern Management Foundations:

  • Shifts from hierarchical leadership to co-production and participatory decision-making.
  • Emphasizes empowering teams closest to the work, fostering ownership, and integrating adaptive practices across stakeholders.

Building Effective Partnerships:

  • Techniques to create psychological safety, align purpose, and motivate interdisciplinary teams.
  • Strategies for managing risks, incorporating feedback loops, and maintaining trust across "teams of teams."

Adaptive Frameworks & Tools:

  • Implementation of OKRs (Objectives and Key Results), agile execution, and team-design strategies to coordinate action without micromanagement.
  • Emphasis on iterative processes that strengthen partnerships and improve ecological, regulatory, or resource-management outcomes.

Applied Learning

  • Case Study Spotlight: Chesapeake Bay’s watershed restoration and fisheries management.
  • Analyzes adaptive management in action, including water quality challenges, regulatory impacts, and iterative solutions for ecosystem health.
  • Demonstrates how shared incentives, stakeholder collaboration, and data-driven adjustments lead to scalable success.

Target Outcomes

Participants will learn to:

  • Lead distributed teams in climate, biodiversity, land/water management, or international development projects.
  • Design adaptive processes that balance stakeholder interests with ecological sustainability.
  • Apply stewardship principles to influence policy, guide decision-makers, and align incentives for lasting impact.

Syllabus

Module 1: Co-Production & Chesapeake

  1. Production and Chesapeake
  2. Roles and Responsibilities of Rights Holders, Duty Bearers, Facilitators
  3. Benefits: Open Innovation in Environmental Problem-Solving
  4. Challenges of Co-production in Environmental Management
  5. Role of Change Agents
  6. Approaches and Frameworks

Module 2: Strategic Doing

  1. Strategic Doing
  2. Strategic Doing Fundamentals
  3. Shift to Modern Leadership
  4. From Teamwork to Network
  5. Trust

Module 3: Agile Leader Skills

  1. TEAM: Talk
  2. TEAM: Envision
  3. TEAM: Analyze
  4. TEAM: Motivate

Module 4: Case Study on the Chesapeake

  1. Case Introduction
  2. Outreach
  3. Collaboration
  4. Co-Production

Taught by

Richard Arnold, William “Bill” Dennison, John Johnson and Bill Brantley

Reviews

5.0 rating, based on 3 Class Central reviews

Start your review of Co-Production: Addressing Complexity with Environmental Adaptive Management

  • Anonymous
    Course was well paced and provided information and strategies that I intend on including in my career
  • Anonymous
    This was the best course out of the Environmental Project Management certificate. It was well organized, with relevant concepts that I can apply directly to my career as an environmental project manager. I would recommend that the preceding courses are restructured for clarity and cohesion using this course as a template.
  • Anonymous
    Very good and interesting topic. I have learnt lot of new things.
    Some area might need to little bit simple and other all are ok .

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