Schroeder Law Offices plays some serious water games, and so should you! Serious gaming is an emerging tool in negotiation, mediation, and water conflict. Serious water gaming acts is a way to share knowledge, interact in an engaging way, and build capacity to solve the real problems in water resources. The games allow for role-playing for social learning in a less-threatening environment. Parties that might otherwise be unable to cooperate build capacity, relationships, and deescalate tensions, at least momentary. Careful reflection after the game concludes provides lessons that can be applied to the real-life problems. When we aren’t helping you with your real-life water issues, we are honing our water gaming skills.
The United States Army Corp of Engineers has started playing too! They have built a dam-based game resembling the way the agency balances water needs for agriculture, flood control, habitat, water quality, and hydropower. The “River Basin Balancer Game” is available for free at: http://www.nwo.usace.army.mil/Missions/Dam-and-Lake-Projects/Missouri-River-Dams/Basin-Balancer/
The United Nations plays “Aqua Republica.” This game simulates the demands placed on water managers, balancing food, energy, and wildlife. The game includes social revolts, population increases, and economic impacts. There are multiple versions available representing different regions. Choices of crops, environmental policies, and irrigation technology all influence the player’s success. To begin playing for free, follow this link to the registration menu: http://capnet.aquarepublica.com/register
For those that enjoy board games, the California Water Crisis Game pits the three regions of California against each other in a competition for water, but also reputation! Different stages of water law are represented, including the Gold Rush era and today’s Sustainable Groundwater Management Act. (See our blog post on the Act here: https://www.water-law.com/california-will-have-regulations-on-groundwater-pumping/) More information is available here: http://www.californiarailmap.com/cawater
Schroeder Law Offices will be developing its own game to show the kinds of legal problems you could encounter with your water issues! For more information and games, see Dr. Todd Jarvis’s blog at http://rainbowwatercoalition.blogspot.com/2016/04/serious-gaming-in-water.html and the upcoming paper titled “Serious Water Gaming” by Shelby Hockaday, Todd Jarvis, and Fatima Taha.
Make sure to stay tuned to Schroeder Law Offices’ Water Blog for more news that may affect you!
This article was drafted with the assistance of Law Clerk Jakob Wiley, a concurrent student at Oregon State University’s Water Resources Policy and Management graduate program and a law student at the University of Oregon School of Law.