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Introduction to participatory tools and methods

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Title: Introduction to participatory tools and methods


1
Introduction to participatory tools and methods
2
Adaptation Entry Points for CSOs
  • DISASTER RISK REDUCTION front end preparation
  • policy and planning
  • Policy analysis and research (e.g. political
    ecology of adaptation)
  • Stakeholder identification analysis
  • Participatory planning processes
  • Incorporation of traditional knowledge
  • physical preventative measures
  • Adaptive designs retrofitting
  • Natural resources conservation
  • Integrated resources management (INRM)
  • Incorporation of traditional knowledge
  • Reforestation, conservation management
  • physical coping and/or adaptive measures and
  • Vulnerability and risk assessment studies
  • Participatory contingency planning
  • Participatory hazard mapping resilience
    development
  • community capacity building
  • Awareness building
  • Community level adaptation planning

CANARI 2007
3
Adaptation Entry Points for CSOs
  • Economic capabilities the ability to earn an
    income, to consume and to have assets
  • Community and sectoral risk reduction and
    resilience building
  • Livelihoods diversification
  • Crop diversification
  • Sharing of traditional knowledge best practices
  • Human capabilities based on health, education,
    nutrition, clean water and shelter
  • Research
  • Awareness building and education on Integrated
    Natural Resources Management, adaptation planning
    vulnerability reduction and resilience building
  • Capacity development in planning and
    participatory processes
  • Political capabilities human rights, a voice and
    some influence over public policies
  • Capacity development
  • Participatory planning processes
  • Awareness building education
  • Participation in resource allocation
    decision-making (land use planning food
    security)
  • Advocacy (land use planning food security)
  • Socio-cultural capabilities the ability to
    participate as a valued member of a community
  • Capacity development
  • Participatory planning processes
  • Awareness building education

CANARI 2007
4
Some key tools and methods in participatory
processes
  • Participatory planning and management
  • Stakeholder identification and analysis
  • Stakeholder mobilisation
  • Assessing and building capacity for participation
  • organisational
  • institutional (policies, laws, structures,
    relationships, organisations)
  • Skills
  • Participatory mapping
  • Conflict management (negotiation)

Photo Allan Smith
5
Why participation?
  • Participation is important in climate change
    adaptation because

6
Why participation?
  • Incorporates a wide range of perspectives and
    ideas, resulting in improved decision making and
    management
  • Improves the knowledge and skills of all
    stakeholders
  • Increases the likelihood of stakeholder support
    through involvement in decision-making
  • Can provide a forum for identifying conflicts
    between users and negotiating solutions to them
  • Can contribute to stakeholder empowerment and
    local institutional development, especially when
    the sharing of management responsibility in
    involved

7
What is participation?
Forests and Forest User Groups in St
Vincent Photos Fitzgerald Providence
8
Spectrum of participation
Top-down decision making most powerful
stakeholders informs some of the other
stakeholders of some decisions
Inputs, analysis and decisions made with
equitable involvement of all stakeholders
Most powerful stakeholders sell the decision to
selected other stakeholders
Most powerful stakeholders present tentative
decision for discussion
Joint analysis but final decision still with most
powerful stakeholders
9
Types of participation
  • Manipulative
  • Passive
  • Participation by consultation
  • Participation for material incentives
  • Functional
  • Interactive
  • Self-mobilisation
  • Source Bass et al (1995)

10
Where is your country in terms of participation
in climate change policy and adaptation?
Top-down decision making most powerful
stakeholders informs some of the other
stakeholders of some decisions
Inputs, analysis and decisions made with
equitable involvement of all stakeholders
Most powerful stakeholders sell the decision to
selected other stakeholders
Most powerful stakeholders present tentative
decision for discussion
Joint analysis but final decision still with most
powerful stakeholders
11
What factors determine the kind of participation
that is most appropriate?
  • Purpose of initiative
  • Complexity
  • Urgency
  • Degree of conflict
  • Capacity
  • the philosophy of those leading the process in
    relation to participation
  • skills and knowledge
  • available time
  • available human and financial resources

12
Determine need for planning process
Identify needs or problems to be addressed
Identify/mobilise stakeholders
Define goals and objectives
Conduct stakeholder analysis
Create mechanisms for equitable stakeholder
participation
Collect information on which to base decisions
Monitor and evaluate
Share results with stakeholders
Analyse information and identify options
Negotiate among stakeholders
Formulate plans and responses
Implement
Participatory planning
13
Stakeholder identification
  • Who is a stakeholder?
  • The individuals, groups and organisations that
    are involved in or may be affected by a change in
    the conditions governing the management and use
    of a resource, space or sector.

14
Who is a stakeholder?
15
Why stakeholder identification?
  • Primary aim to document all those who have a
    stake
  • Stakeholder identification can become a mechanism
    to widen and identify others
  • Stakeholder identification can help to identify
    potential or actual conflicts
  • Exclusion can have unexpected and undesirable
    consequences

16
Some considerations for stakeholder mobilisation
  • How does information reach the stakeholders and
    can they interpret it?
  • When does it reach them? Give sufficient notice.
  • Equitable participation
  • Time and place of meetings
  • All stakeholders together or in separate groups?
  • Who will facilitate? Should it be someone
    independent?
  • Options for inputs outside of meetings

17
Why stakeholder analysis?
  • To identify management priorities
  • To identify mechanisms for participation
  • To monitor and manage change
  • As a tool for negotiation and conflict management
  • A platform for building and strengthening
    partnerships
  • To understand existing capacity and capacity gaps
  • To provide a baseline of information for
    monitoring and evaluating change

18
Outcomes of stakeholder analysis
  • Greater understanding of
  • relationships and power (institutional framework)
  • areas of potential or actual conflict or
    collaboration
  • capacity building needs for participation in
    management
  • stakeholder rights and legitimacy
  • resource use and priority
  • issues for management

19
Questions for stakeholder analysis
  • Depend on the reason for the analysis, e.g.
  • Benefits from and interests in resource (current
    and future)
  • Impacts of a proposed change in management
    regime socio-economic and environmental
    (positive and negative)
  • Power, rights, responsibilities (formal and
    informal)
  • Understanding existing or potential conflict
  • Capacity to contribute to management

20
Conflict analysis matrix e.g.
Ref CANARI Guidelines 5
21
Power analysis e.g.
Ref CANARI Guidelines 5
22
Stakeholder power analysis
e.g. Forestry Division, EMA, TCPD, Min Energy,
MPUE, Min Housing, Min Works, Commissioner of
State Lands
e.g. Stakeholder Committee
e.g. Community Local tour guides, Squatters
23
Mapping relationships
  • Visually maps the relationships between all of
    the stakeholders

24
Stakeholder capacity analysis
  • Assess capacity for participation
  • World view and culture
  • Structure
  • Adaptive strategies
  • Skills
  • Material resources
  • Linkages

Reflection What is the capacity of your
organisation to participate in climate change
planning and adaptation?
25
Complexity
  • Wide range of users and actors who are constantly
    changing
  • Danger of simplifying complex realities, e.g.
  • People belong to several stakeholder groups
  • Stakeholder groups are not homogenous
  • Understanding and managing complex situations
  • Complex human relationships
  • Complex human interfaces with natural resources
  • Competing uses of natural resources
  • Participatory process but caution where there are
    acute conflicts and inequity

26
Each situation is unique
  • Need for understanding of local conditions and
    realities
  • Challenges of natural resource management
  • preservation versus livelihood pursuits
  • No one size fits all
  • Need to tailor responses

27
Challenges of participation
  • Costly in terms of time and resources for all
    (including stakeholders)
  • Raises stakeholder expectations and can lead to
    disillusionment if realistic expectations not
    defined
  • Where capacity lacking, can be counterproductive
    and result in backlash
  • Consultation burnout

28
People and the Sea
  • Watch the film and assess what participatory
    methods were used and how they contributed to
  • managing a resource that had previously been
    scarce (adaptation)
  • improved livelihoods
  • enhanced capacity
  • reduced conflict

29
Conflict management
  • What is conflict?
  • An umbrella term for divergent aims, methods or
    behaviour frequently stemming from differences in
    power between stakeholders.

Disputes
Conflicts
30
Why do conflicts/disputes arise around natural
resource use and management?
31
Why do conflicts/disputes arise around natural
resource use and management?
32
Cross cutting themes
  • Change Natural resource management is concerned
    with rules that govern access and use, rather
    than natural resources. When those rules change,
    rights are affected and disputes may arise.
  • Status of the resource Where resources are
    finite or scarce, disputes may arise with
    increasing intensity
  • Context Many of the causes and reasons for
    conflicts are beyond the control of natural
    resource managers but managers must be able to
    interpret the wider world and understand the
    relevance for their work

33
Actions and responses to conflict
Separate action e.g. using personal influence,
squatting
Joint action e.g. negotiation, mediation
Third party action e.g. arbitration,
adjudication
34
Negotiation
  • is based on the premise that to be sustainable
    any agreement between stakeholders must meet as
    many of their complementary needs as possible
  • calls for an open and flexible outlook rather
    than grudging compromise
  • often requires an independent facilitator.

35
Successful negotiations
  • move stakeholders from entrenched positions
  • address different layers of conflict, e.g.
  • procedural (e.g. right to be heard)
  • substantive (e.g. livelihood issues)
  • include all stakeholders that can impact
    positively or negatively on the outcomes
  • take into account in the design of the process
    existing power relations and structures so that
    factors such as gender, wealth, ethnicity and
    class do not prevent stakeholders from making
    their case.

36
Addressing power differences in the negotiations
means
  • assessing and building stakeholder capacity to
    participate
  • ensuring that marginalised voices are heard
  • levelling the playing field for negotiations
  • ensuring that all parties can have outcomes
    revisited if circumstances change

37
A word of caution
  • ..it would be a mistake to see participation
    as a magic cure for all ills. The evidence
    suggests that processes that involve a wide range
    of actors in management, far from making things
    easier, actually result in complex arrangements
    which reveal conflicts and tensions rather than
    make them go away. Conflicts and natural resource
    management go hand in hand. Participatory
    approaches can help point out where problems are
    likely to occur and provide a way forward once
    they do.

38
Small group work
  • Divide into 2-3 small groups
  • Select a case study based on the community of one
    of the group members and discuss some or all of
    the following
  • What are likely to be the major impacts of
    climate change?
  • Which stakeholders will be most affected?
  • Which stakeholders are best situated to minimise
    or mitigate against the negative effects of
    climate change?
  • What are likely to be the areas of conflict?
  • What types of participatory processes could be
    used to bring stakeholders together and negotiate
    conflicts?
  • How would you mobilise the stakeholders to
    participate?
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