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Juan Carlos Castilla-Rho
Juan Carlos Castilla-Rho
Lecturer at University of Technology Sydney
Juan is a transdisciplinary systems modeller working at the interface of water resource management and computational social science. He combines numerical modelling, social simulation, systems thinking and complexity science to better understand the dynamics between people and the environment. Juan’s research focuses on developing interactive management flight simulators to improve the ability of stakeholders to reason, explain, design, communicate, and explore in wicked problem situations. Juan worked for six years in the Atacama Desert for the Chilean Water Authority, water utilities and also as consultant, dealing with complex groundwater issues in one of driest regions in the world.
Kiama, Australia

Public Documents 2
UTS PHD RESEARCH PROJECT PLAN
Marcos Canales Piccolo
Juan Carlos Castilla-Rho

Marcos Canales Piccolo

and 1 more

December 11, 2019
FACULTY OF ENGINEERING AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Sustainable groundwater management: How long and what wil...
Juan Carlos Castilla-Rho

Juan Carlos Castilla-Rho

and 4 more

November 27, 2019
Groundwater depletion is arguably one of humanity’s greatest sustainability challenges of the 21st century. With Sustainable Development Goals only a decade away, water authorities around the world are in the urgent need for concrete and targeted measures to ensure that communities adhere to groundwater management policies as rapidly and as effectively as possible. In this paper, we combine computational social science, groundwater modelling and empirical data from the World Values Survey to generate future ensembles of hydro-social trajectories under alternative courses of management and social action or inaction. Our simulations shed new light on the role that cultural values can play in shaping the societal trajectories and norms that emerge when resources are either allocated or not sufficiently allocated to monitor compliance, issue fines, engage community leaders, and deter rule-breakers. This study presents a new approach to explore and evaluate the capacity of existing and future management actions to steer groundwater systems towards sustainable trajectories, to forecast the celerity and timing of social transformations at the inter-decadal scale, and to help nations identify the most pertinent management options under institutional, political, social, and/or cultural constraints. The methods presented here are broadly applicable to support strategic decisions that rely on the monitoring, enforcement, and compliance of environmental regulations.

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