Title:
1It was a bit meandering but so what?Using
Participatory Action Researchin river catchment
management
- Geoff Whitman and Rachel Pain
2- What stakeholders said at the beginning
- R5 Well I find it you know, with academics, they
know, theyve been to university, theyve got
their degrees, theyve read this, theyve
studied that...and I just thought to come on
something like this and not be patronised... - Â
- R6Â Â Â Â Theyll come from, these people will come
along from the Environment Agency and this,
that and other, and theyll say you do that,
they haven't a bloody, no practical idea
whatsoever. - Â
- R5Â No.
- Â
- R6Â Â Â They won't listen to you, theyve read it
in books and thats what we come across and
that comes regular and thats whats wrong with
the country they don't listen to the people
enough. - Â
- Â
3The Centre for Social Justice and Community
Action
- A research centre made up of academic researchers
from different disciplines and community
partners. - University-public engagement as a two-way
dialogue, research as co-produced. - Our aim is to
- promote and develop research, teaching,
public/community engagement and staff development
around the broad theme of social justice - provide a centre of excellence for theoretically
informed participatory and community-based
research - provide a locus for good practice in this type of
research and associated initiatives in teaching,
training, engagement and staff development. - Website http//www.dur.ac.uk/beacon/socialjustice
/ - email socialjustice_at_durham.ac.uk
4Co-production
- What do we mean by co-production?
-
- Moving beyond interdisciplinary working and its
dialogue amongst Experts - Institutional level
- Jasanoff (2004) Institutional focus of
observable historical phenomena at level of
society - Individual level
- Callon (1999) the Co-Production of Knowledge
Model . This recognises that concerned publics
have, - specific, particular and concrete knowledge
and competencies, the fruit of their experience
and observations(p.85), which, have an
important role to play in enhancing the
abstractknowledge of the scientists (p. , 85). -
- PAR
- A foundational tenet of PAR (Lewin, 1945
Freire, 1973), that requires that we - stop working with people as subjectsinstead
we build relationships as co-researchers (Reason
and Bradbury 2008, p.9) and that co-researchers
are engaged as, - full persons and that exploration is based
directly on their understanding of their own
action and experience, rather than being filtered
through an outsiders perspective (ibid, p.9).
5Participatory Action Research
- PAR involves people who are concerned about or
affected by an issue taking a leading role in
producing and using knowledge about it. - Many names are now used to describe research
processes that are in some way participatory -
PAR is distinct because - it is driven by participants (a group of people
who have a stake in the issue being researched),
rather than an outside sponsor, funder or
academic (although they may be invited to help) - it offers a democratic model of who can produce,
own and use knowledge - it is collaborative at every stage, involving
discussion, pooling skills and working together - it is intended to result in some action, change
or improvement on the issue being researched. - it inverts who constructs research questions,
designs, methods, interpretations and products
(Fine et al 2007)
6Participation in water management
- Public participation is now firmly established
across academic and policy spheres (and also
hotly contested and critiqued) - Particular resonance in recent European water
legislation - Aarhus Convention (1998) requires that measures
are taken to include public participation
approaches during the preparation of plans and
programmes (Carter and Howe, 2006) - Inclusion of stakeholder participation
requirements within the Water Framework Directive
(2000/60/EC). - WFD one of the first pieces of European
legislation that explicitly demands a high degree
of involvement of non-state actors in the
implementation (Newig et al., 2005). - In the UK, River Basin Plans management is
currently trialled through the Environment
Agencys 10 trial catchments - We are exploring improved ways of engaging with
people and organisations at a catchment level in
ways that can make a difference to the health of
all our waters http//www.environment-agency.gov
.uk/research/planning/131506.aspx). - Richard Benyon, Minister for Natural Environment
and Fisheries these catchments should, provide
a clear understanding of the issues in the
catchment, involve local communities in decision
making by sharing evidence, listening to their
ideas, working out priorities for action and
seeking to deliver integrated actions that
address local issues in a cost effective way and
protect local resources (World Water Day, 22
March 2011). - BUT... Technical decisions on river basin
management will mostly be made within the
regulatory framework encompassed by the WFD so
there is little scope for extended, in depth,
involvement with the public (Wood, 2008).
Conflict with above?
7From surveillant science and participatory
modelling to PAR
- Diffuse pollution is a key area in catchment
management - Catchments as critical filters for water
issues - Difficulty of location few intensively
monitored catchments - Surveillant science (Lane et al., 2009) using
mathematical models and remote sensing - Limited public engagement
- Project written to challenge this approach
- Participatory modelling ...the use of
modelling in support of a decision-making process
that involves stakeholders (Voinov and Bousquet,
2010, p.2) has been widely used in catchment
management - Can a PAR approach be applied to this (seemingly
oppositional) issue/methods? - PAR is an alternative way of doing science
- Refusing the distinctions between theoretical
and applied, and science and advocacy critical
participatory action research commits at once to
human rights, social justice, and scientific
validity - (Torre et al., 2011, forthcoming)
- Public Science (Torre et al., 2011)
(http//www.publicscienceproject.org/participatory
-action-research-as-public-science/) - But doesnt sit easily with traditions/institution
s of science (or social science) - Are the challenges greater when PAR is attempted
with hard science methods/research/policymaking?
- What can PAR learn from engaging with the
scientific method? Can this method be peeled off
the traditional hierarchy of expertise? What does
that do to science?
8Background to the project
- Two projects both funded under the RELU
programme -
- Understanding Environmental Knowledge
Controversies The case of flood risk science
(Oxford, Durham, Newcastle and UEA) - 3 year project
- Multiple aims but focusing on one To experiment
with a new approach to public engagement in the
production of interdisciplinary environmental
science, involving the use of Competency Groups -
-
- Building Adaptive Strategies for Environmental
Change with Rural Land Managers (Rachel Pain,
David Milledge and Geoff Whitman) - 18 month project focused on how we might
- explore and promote novel approaches and
partnerships for interdisciplinary research and
analysis on living with environmental change in
rural contexts - Methodology
- (i) We used PAR with Lune Rivers Trust
- (ii) All members of team critically evaluated
the process and outcomes
9Identifying the research focus
10SCIMAP Sensitive Catchment Integrated Modelling
and Analysis Platform
- SCIMAP aims to determine where within a catchment
is the most probable source of diffuse pollution
- The idea to develop some form of risk assessment
tool that might be used on farms - The idea that you might be able to identify how
vulnerable a farm yard is in terms of material
from it getting into the river - The influence of roads as pathways that
concentrate and sustain water flow, increasing
the likelihood of connection - The critique of SCIMAP, particularly the Land
Cover map and its inability to differentiate
between different forms of improved pasture
leading to data collection by the group and a
small test of the influence of more complete land
cover data.
11The rest of the research process then focused on
co-producing 3 outputs
- A Farm Vulnerability Tool
- A Risk Assessment Tool
- A PAR toolkit
12The movement and sharing of expertise
- Knowledge production is a negotiated process -
both between academics and locals and between the
locals themselves (they contested each others
knowledges) - The coding of the models remains with the
scientists. However, other aspects were
collectively negotiated such as - What the questions of interest were
- How feasible solutions might be
- What the wider institutional context was and how
this would impact on our proposed solutions - Risk assessment index
- Farm vulnerability tool
- Critiques of SCIMAP and land cover
- How to disseminate and use the end products
- The models become a product of the collective
competence of the group, as they incorporate
multiple knowledges - We question the term redistributing expertise
(c.f Lane et al., 2009 Landstrom et al., 2011)
because its underlying assumption is always that
the academic/scientist/policymaker is the active
partner who is benevolent and able to empower
local knowledge. - With the conditions in place for real
collaboration, this can happen on both sides.
13Evaluating PAR
- Collective evaluation the project approach of
PAR - Whole group discussion (meeting 9)
- Follow-on interviews with participants
- Audio diary kept by the academics throughout the
project - Project tools being used already
14Critically evaluating PAR
- Lack of clarity / culture of ground-up working?
-
- I havent grasped really what you want hereIm
baffled at the moment completely you know and
youre on about four meetings, if I dont get
more understanding I wouldnt be at the next one
because I dont know what youre on about - PAR local member
- Its just an academic exercise
- Yes my comment was this is just going to be an
academic exercise, thats how I felt about it, I
didnt feel it was going to progress or do its
something that Durham University its almost a
self-indulgent thing you knowI didnt think it
was particularly a two-way thing - PAR local member
-
15- Benefits of the PAR process
- Rachel An alternative would be that wed come
to youon that first day and said this is what
its going to be about, that would have been the
alternative. - R1 This is definitely better, this process.
- R2 Definitely.
- R3 Yes.
- R1 Instead of somebody coming along and saying
this is what were going to do, we decided what
we wanted you to do, and thats pretty unusual.
So we werent being forced to accept something
thatmight not be exactly what we wanted, we had
the input too. - R1 Weve got a very good result out of itDon't
forget youre dealing with a big diversity of
people and I don't think thats easy, thats not
easy, I thought it worked very wellThe people
who live here and work here and fish here and
farm here are the people who know what goes on.
I think theres nothing better than local
knowledge when you need information about the
land in my opinion.
16- Geoff Yes, so one of the things that was raised
was that as a Rivers Trust you rarely get the
opportunity to just sit around the table and
discuss issues in the way that we did. - Â
- R1 You hit the nail on the head, the Rivers
Trusts if you will are very much seen as a
spending arm of DEFRA, and DEFRA may come along
and say well theres X amount of money available
for buffer stripping and X amount of money
available for tree planting and X amount of money
available for weir removal and theres always
then a scramble to get projects on that meet the
criteria for each one of those particular
fieldsThis I think is a very useful tool to
actually get people round the table, sit down,
look at the catchment, decide what the issues are
in there, and then prioritise your action plan to
address the pressures and I think it corrects
that sort of, at the moment things are sort of
top down, driven from the top if you will.
17Using project tools
- Geoff Has anything happened with it since we
finished? - Â
- R1 Im using that bit that we developedthe land
study and the risk assessmentWenning Improvement
Project. - Â
- Geoff Oh so the Environment Agency sounded
interested in it? - Â
- R1 Very interested.
- Â
- Geoff Really?
- Â
- R1 Yes, yes I had a meeting last night here with
who is the team leaderfor this area and we
actually discussed that workand he is keen for
me to talk to somebody from Natural Englandwhos
leading work on diffuse pollution and maybe give
them my ideas you knowto maybe give a catchment
assessment of where the pressures are arising.
18- A roller-coaster ride
- Â
- Geoff This has just been, its been a
roller-coasterWithin the first, what was it,
maybe the first five minutes of that meeting of
me trying to quite clumsily explain what we were
trying to do Mick put his finger on it and said
basically you know I have no idea what youre
talking about, what the hell is this project
about you know and I just at that point I got
really anxious and thought oh no, this is going
to be a disasterAnd how are we going to pull
this one out of the bagSo that was my initial
thing but then very quickly it changedI think
the rest of it for me has been a fantastic
process, Ive thoroughly enjoyed being part of
it, so thats my experience of the project, its
gone up and down and up and down but at the end
you know I think its been a great process for me
personally.
19Conclusions?
- Is the first use of PAR in the UK on a river
catchment management issue a success? And could
this be a model of how to do public engagement
in river catchments (i.e. River Basin Plans)? - We think so but.
- The institutional/policy context may be a
challenge - Scientists/policymakers/all of us vary widely in
our aptitude for PAR - What about the impacts on PAR?
- Shows that PAR can work with the (other)
scientific method - the commitment to real
collaboration is what matters - Institutional capture national support but
local implementation - Boundaries of PAR
- LRT not the usual focus of PAR legitimacy
issues?