Title: Enhancing Community Engagement in the Lake Eyre Basin
1Enhancing Community Engagement in the Lake Eyre
Basin
2Enhancing Community Engagement in the Lake Eyre
Basin
Desert Knowledge CRC project funded through NHT
The People, Communities and Economies of the
Lake Eyre Basin
- Objective
- To improve the understanding and functioning of
the organisations that manage ecosystem services
in the Lake Eyre Basin - (ie. those organisations that act as the
interface between government and communities)
- Researchers
- Tim Smith, Lynn Brake, Alexander Herr, Silva
Larson, Tom Measham, Cathy Robinson, Angela
Wardell-Johnson, Mark Stafford Smith, Tim Lynam,
and Anne Leitch
3Benefits of community engagement
- Korfmacher (2001) states that the most common
rationales are democratic, substantive, and
pragmatic - Democratic rationale emphasises the inherent
value of public participation in decisions that
affect the public - Substantive rationale citizens may have unique
contributions to public decisions and citizens'
values and technical knowledge should help to
inform the final decision - Pragmatic rationale a community that has
contributed to and been educated by the
decision-making process is more likely to support
the decision outcome and facilitate its
implementation
Korfmacher, K. S., 2001, The politics of
participation in watershed modelling,
Environmental Management, vol. 27, pp. 161-176
4Problems created by ineffective engagement
- Adversarial modes of decision-making
- Mismatches of jurisdictions, benefits, costs and
implementation - Subordination of public interest to a special
interest - Lack of coordination and trust intra and inter
institutional silos - Institutional inertia
- Piecemeal or symptoms approaches to problems
- Ineffective use of science
- Inability to deal with complexity
5Evolution of community-based management
- Shift from top-down NRM management to
community-based NRM - Strengthened formalisation through regional
arrangements (in some jurisdictions) - Goal of place-based communities taking
responsibilities for NRM
- Increasing importance of community engagement
6Challenges in remote regions
- Sparse populations and limited capacity
- Large distances
- High seasonal variability
- Dependence on natural resources
- Variability of costs and worth of those natural
resources - Remoteness in terms of support and influence
- Pronounced decoupling of resources, rights
responsibilities
Remote regions are disproportionately dependent
on the management and use of their natural and
cultural resources
7Approach to understanding and improving engagement
- Regional social, economic and resource profiles
- Toolkit of engagement success factors of NRM
organisations - Case studies of organisational interventions
- Development of on-going engagement monitoring
systems
8Regional social, economic and resource profiles
- Geographic display and overlay of socio-economic
and ecosystem service characteristics of the Lake
Eyre Basin - A conceptual network analysis of formal
relationships within and between sectors (eg.
mining)
9Socio-economic and ecosystem service
characteristics
10Socio-economic and ecosystem service
characteristics
- The LEB scores low in terms of all four
socio-economic indices that the Australian Bureau
of Statistics developed to describe the wellbeing
of the nation - Socio-economic information base (Census
information) usefulness limited in outback
regions (data quality and resolution)
11Network analysis of formal relationships
- Disconnects in formal relationships exist between
and within sectors
Mining networks
12Network analysis of formal relationships
13Network analysis of formal relationships
- Emphasis on one voice for sectors may not be
appropriate - Challenges for engagement of non-resident power
holders - There are multiple community associations
affecting decision-making in the Lake Eyre Basin - communities of place vs. communities of interest
14Lake Eyre Basin current research
- The current focus of the Lake Eyre Basin project
is to develop a toolkit of success factors for
interface institutions - Community-based researchers
- Interviews with influencers in governments,
industries and communities
15Lake Eyre Basin future work
- Case studies of success factors for interface
institutions - Action research
- Development of monitoring and evaluation
approaches for NRM enabling factors
16Summary thoughts
- Natural Resource Management is a social process,
creating both challenges and opportunities in
remote regions - Interventions need rigorous and ongoing
assessment for continual improvement and informed
adaptive management - Remote areas have special data, research and
management needs - Identification of trends only possible where data
are appropriate in spatial and temporal scale. - Policies need to incorporate local
idiosyncrasies, so blueprint approaches are
inappropriate for large areas - The drivers of communities and governments need
to be understood and the mechanisms to support
them