Institutional mapping is a visual assessment methodology used to identify the key actors and their functional interplay within a specific sector or domain of governance. As water management responsibilities are shared across sectors and scales, conducting an institutional mapping is a helpful way to identify potential overlaps and seek ways to enhance coordination. This Tool introduces what is institutional mapping, highlights its purpose and benefits, discusses its application within the context of water resources management, presents a step-by-step approach to conducting it, discusses how to develop a participatory institutional perception mapping, and presents few practical challenges to consider in relations to institutional mapping.
Institutional mapping is a visual method of identifying key institutions, illustrating their relationships, and specifying the respective function they play within a specific sector or area of governance. Institutional mapping provides an overview of the power structure and its influence given a specific issue, geographic and legal boundaries of governance, how governance relates to human activities, and insight into the social hierarchy. Institutional maps typically illustrate the following key structural features:
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Institutions: these are the formal and informal stakeholder groups and organisations that play a role within a specific area of governance (e.g., ministries and governmental offices, civil society organisations, private actors, etc.)
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Roles and Functions: several different functions are performed under a specific area of governance. Such function can include for instance informing, consulting, authorizing, financing, operating, regulation, etc. An institutional map must specify what are the roles played by each institution that is depicted within the institutional map.
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Relations: institutional maps are not only about understanding “who does what”, it is also about identifying “how institutions relate to each other”. Whether an institution reports to another is a critical feature that needs to be depicted in an institutional map. You can also use an institutional map to characterise whether institutions have a positive or adverse relationship and how strong that relationship is.
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Boundaries: in certain sectors decisions are made at various levels (municipal, watershed, regional, national, regional, etc.). Maps should illustrate where actors situate themselves across those geographic boundaries of governance.
Figure 1 below provides an example of an institutional map highlighting these main structural elements.
Figure 1. Institutional Map of Water Resources Management in Cape Town, South Africa (Source: OECD, 2021)