HOLISTIC APPROACH FOR HEALTHY AND RESILIENT SOCIAL-ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS
Attaining interdependent objectives
for optimal impact and sustainability
FINAL REPORT
December 15, 2020
A Conservation Measures Partnership Learning Initiative, Supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
A beekeeper maintains one of the suspending structure of beehives that the park is experimenting as a deterrent to block elephants that try to leave the. WWF Kui Buri Beehives. Thomas Cristofoletti WWF-US
Executive Summary
Holistic approach to social-ecological systems
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A significant portion of the world’s high conservation value areas are occupied, surrounded, and/or owned or managed by indigenous and local people, yet efforts by conservation and other social change organizations in these places are typically not sufficiently multifaceted to attain or sustain desired conservation and human well-being aims. A recent survey (November 2020) conducted the the CMP-Moore Population, Health, and Environment Learning Initiative showed that many aspects of human well-being are seen as highly linked to conservation effectiveness, but most organizations look to others to work on them or they don’t work on them at all. Many within and beyond the conservation space firmly believe that a paradigm shift is needed such that these holistic approaches become the norm of how we work in social-ecological landscapes.
CMP and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation sought to harness cross-organizational learning on priority topics to help inform and improve conservation action on the ground. Given the need outlined above, the topic of Holistic Approaches for Social-ecological Systems was prioritized as one of three strategies to be explored. This report is the result of discussions, contributions and elaboration by a 30-member working group of diverse backgrounds and expertise, which sought to:
Work took place over a period of 3.5 months via a series of three convenings, complemented by two surveys, and review and comment on draft products along the way. Throughout, the process was iterative, with the working group contributing ideas and drafting content that was later reviewed and refined.
Executive Summary
Holistic approach to social-ecological systems
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A Holistic Social-Ecological Approach recognizes the profound interdependency between the well-being of people and the health of biodiversity, by championing both of these through collaborations that negotiate and advance holistic solutions for the good of people and nature. Holistic approaches are characterized by a set of important hallmarks, including the social-ecological system as the ultimate target, inclusive, equitable collaboration, honest, pragmatic negotiations, and shifting mindsets and other key conditions as needed to ensure long-term resilience and sustainability -- the ultimate outcome of a holistic approach. A set of fundamental principles also are central to holistic approaches, including free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC), justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion (JEDI), and gender equity. While the Conservation Standards present human well-being as a result of biodiversity conservation, a holistic approach considers both human well-being and biodiversity conservation as interdependent and equal ultimate goals to ensure the health, resilience, and sustainability of a social-ecological system.
The working group collaborative situation assessment outlined the ways in which holistic approaches should help attain and sustain desired impacts on human well-being and environmental health. As a start, the adoption of a holistic approach seeks to address the lack of full partnership/ collaboration and shared vision among rights holders, NGOs, stakeholders as well as the insufficient understanding of their needs, aspirations, and challenges. A holistic approach recognises that these factors often lead to the failure of solutions to respond effectively to the complexity or nature of challenges, to the lack of sustained change in attitude/ behavior, and to the ultimate inability to achieve attain or sustain desired impacts on human well-being and environmental health.
The fundamental theory of change is that if a holistic approach is employed (versus a more narrow or single sector approach), that will more effectively establish the awareness, conditions, mindsets, and practices that will lead to both near term positive impacts for people and nature as well as higher likelihood of longer term resilience and sustainability of the social-ecological system.
Executive Summary
Holistic approach to social-ecological systems
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Broadly, working group members agreed that holistic approaches should be employed where a lasting, integrated solution is needed that achieves and sustains the health and resilience of a social-ecological system. At the same time, Holistic approaches are not appropriate everywhere; certain conditions should be met such as critical mass of those committed to the approach and a willingness to negotiate and adapt. For instance, holistic approaches are appropriate where a critical and representative mass of local parties, NGOs, and other key stakeholders agree and commit to using this approach over the long time period typically required to get to sustainable impacts.
The working group identified numerous barriers to effective uptake, design, and implementation and elaborated ideas to overcome those challenges. It was suggested that uptake of holistic approaches is limited primarily because of the inability to do, due to funding constraints, challenges around forming/maintaining multi-sectoral partnerships and broader stakeholder collaboration, and lack of proof of concept; design is also innately extremely complicated. Based on these priority barriers, the working group began to elaborate barrier-specific mitigation tactics.
Firstly, a significant increase in funders and funding is needed if holistic approaches are to be adopted and successfully advanced. Holistic approaches require more time, money, and flexibility than single sector approaches, including significant investment at the start to ensure that partnerships and collaborations are formed and reach a shared vision and set of priority objectives that will be advanced together. Expanding this type of funding will require major shifts in donor models, including willingness to fund integrated approaches, providing larger and longer term funding, and adjusting to have reasonable expectations for results.
Secondly, to overcome the barrier of lack of know-how regarding the design and implementation of holistic approaches, practitioners and funders need to increase their knowledge and skills, gain an initial understanding of the approach, and have greater access to training opportunities, materials, and support. It was suggested to generate innovative guidelines and tools, such as a clear and readily applicable theory of change and related indicators of success and a step-by-step guide on how to retrofit programming toward more holistic approach. These could be achieved by continuing to expand on the results of this learning initiative.
Executive Summary
Holistic approach to social-ecological systems
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Thirdly, to encourage NGOs to work across sectors and overcome challenges in the development of critical partnerships, more focus is needed to build multi-disciplinary teams within conservation and other social change organizations, create convening spaces where collaborations can take shape, ensure that funding and implementing organizations’ strategic plans include cross-sector work and goals, securing incentives from funders to support collaboration, and gathering evidence and information demonstrating that it is often in an organization’s best interest to “play well with others” instead of going it alone.
Lastly, while many of the strategies and tactics supported and advanced in the conservation and other social change sectors lack evidence of their effectiveness, impact, and sustainability, the working group feels that this is a particular barrier to funding and adoption of holistic approaches. Greater evidence is needed regarding how to design such an approach, under what conditions it works or doesn’t (from both biodiversity and social standpoints), the costs of the approach as well as costs incurred when such an approach isn’t pursued or when it isn’t executed well, and the potential for this approach to save money. Ultimately, greater evidence is needed to assess whether this approach indeed facilitates achieving objectives FASTER, with increased participation, local initiative, and sustainability.
In sum, Holistic approaches remain relatively new and limited in their application globally, and many important questions remain to enhance their uptake, design, and effective execution. Further investigation is needed to learn more about how to initiate and maintain effective collaborations, measure the outcomes and impact of holistic approaches, and whether and how holistic approaches lead to greater long-term resilience and sustainability.
Beyond this slide deck, further effort is needed to develop materials and publications that advance the uptake, support, and effective execution of holistic approaches. The group considered several options and believes it would be most worthwhile to carry the work forward in 2021, namely to develop a guidance document, to write and circulate an open letter to funders regarding the need for increased and longer term funding for holistic approaches, and to develop and provide a basic orientation to holistic approaches to CMP, CCNet, and other relevant sectors and communities.
THIS REPORT
Initiative purpose, process, and product
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Community members on Mount Namuli, Mozambique. Image credit: Elizabeth O’Neill
The CMP-Moore Learning Initiative on Holistic Approaches
WORKING GROUP MEMBERS
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Facilitators/ Lead Authors
Working Group Members
This report is the result of discussions, contributions and elaboration by a 30-member working group hosted by the Conservation Measures Partnership with support from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. The group was facilitated by two coordinators who also served as the lead authors for this report. We note that the findings and conclusions of this document are those of the working group members and do not necessarily represent the views of their respective organizations.
The CMP-Moore Learning Initiative on Holistic Approaches
PURPOSE AND OBJECTIVES
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Initiative Purpose
CMP and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation sought to harness the collective knowledge of the partnership and use cross-organizational learning on priority topics to help inform and improve conservation action on the ground. In particular, Moore was interested in learning that helps build the foundation for, or shed light on, the conditions under which different strategies are effective.
�Selected Strategies
The CMP membership prioritized for consideration three strategies that all deal with “the people side” of conservation, including:
Holistic approach for social-ecological systems (this report)
Broader environment-development agendas and links to conservation
Population, health, and environment
Working Group Member Objectives
The learning initiative also sought to provide an opportunity for sharing and learning among CMP members and beyond. For the initiative on holistic approaches, working group members said they wanted to:
Rethink, as conservation and human well-being results are typically less than hoped and needed.
Think critically about community engagement in conservation.
Improve and adapt the holistic frameworks we work with.
Help organizations get clarity on their intentions and show how projects are intended to achieve conservation and HWB.
Discuss challenges and explore ideas for breaking barriers to make integrated approaches more common.
Better understand how trade-offs and synergies are managed in multi-objective programs.
Share, learn, and create tools to improve how we care for this planet.
Help provide tools / guidance for more folks to engage with these ideas and incorporate them into their work.
The CMP-Moore Learning Initiative on Holistic Approaches
FINAL PRODUCT
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This deck-based report provides an overview and definition, a Theory of Change, and considerations for design and implementation of a Holistic Approach for Healthy and Resilient Social-ecological Systems.
Intended Audiences
People who we hope will use this document include:
Format
This is an annotated deck, design primarily for reading versus presentation. It is organized in sections that are akin to chapters, with slides containing detailed content.
The CMP-Moore Learning Initiative on Holistic Approaches
WHY IS THIS TOPIC RELEVANT TODAY?
Many of the world’s highest biodiversity places are home to local communities. Often these communities are directly reliant on their surrounding natural resources for such things as food security, income generation, water, and aesthetic and cultural connection. Similarly, the conservation and effective management of biodiversity resources can be heavily dependent on the decisions and behaviors of local land- and resource-holders.
Together, the environment and resident human populations represent complex social-ecological systems in which the health of biodiversity and well-being of people is highly interdependent.
Recognizing this, there is a long history of approaches to engage local people in conservation efforts, including community conservation approaches and integrated conservation and development approaches.
Often, however, these approaches have largely focused on influencing human behaviors toward the ultimate attainment of biodiversity conservation goals and/or taken dichotomous and parallel approaches to advancing conservation of nature and well-being of people.
Additionally, engagement of local land- and resource-holders often has been approached in a manner that has been “for” them or even offered “to” them, but not always fully “with” them, no less recognizing their ultimate leadership and decision-making power.
As a result, within the conservation sector, approaches intended to influence the well-being of human populations have often fallen short in the attainment of biodiversity and human well-being objectives, including ensuring sustainability of results that have been realized.
Understanding these limitations, a growing body of frameworks and approaches seek to holistically advance multi-sectoral solutions that ensure that social-ecological systems are thriving, resilient, and sustainable. These approaches are typically advanced by collaborations among land- and resource-holders, government agencies, other local stakeholders, and conservation and other social change organizations.
Many within and beyond the conservation space firmly believe that a paradigm shift is needed such that these holistic approaches become the norm of how we work in social-ecological landscapes.
This document seeks to document this more holistic approach by providing:
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The CMP-Moore Learning Initiative on Holistic Approaches
PROCESS STEPS
Agree on a definition of what the approach is, including a high-level situation assessment.
Develop a theory of change (TOC) for the approach to upload to the CMP Conservation Actions and Measures Library.
Identify the conditions under which application of the approach would or would not be needed/ appropriate.
Identify and prioritize particular barriers that obstruct delivery on the TOC and realization of intended impacts.
Identify underlying reasons for the barriers to impact and factors that tend to facilitate the achievement of results.
Problem solve around the barriers to craft recommendations for how to design and implement the approach successfully.
Identify priority issues in need of further and/or deeper research and analysis.
To carry out the steps at right, a working group of ~25 participants was formed. The group participated in a series of three convenings over a period of three months (Sep-Nov) and responded to two substantive surveys and one evaluation survey. Draft products also were provided along the way for the group to review and provide feedback. Throughout, the process was iterative, with the working group contributing ideas and drafting content that was later reviewed and refined.
The CMP-Moore Learning Initiative on Holistic Approaches
WORKING GROUP EXPERTISE
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CONSERVATION/ BIODIVERSITY
MICRO/ LOCAL SCALE
MACRO/ GLOBAL SCALE
SOCIO-CULTURAL
Elizabeth O’Neill
Filipa Oitavén
Alan Holt
Majka Burhardt
Diana Alvira
Ana Lemos
Stuart Cowell
Cheryl Margoluis
Gaye Mackenzie
Amy Vedder
Mary Allen
Caroline Stem
Together, the members of the working group brought deep background and expertise to explore the topic of holistic approaches to social- ecological systems:
Saras Kumar
Matt Muir
Kristen P Patterson
Estuardo Secaira
Madeleine McKinnon
Megan Hill
Carol Damberg
Erica Cochrane
Heather Barna
John Morrison
Oscar Maldonado
Stephanie Mladinich
Matt Luizza
Leander Lacy
In this graph, the placement of each person’s name indicates their assessment of their “positionality”: the sum of their experiences, background, knowledge on the axis of local-scale to global, and on the spectrum of conservation/ biodiversity to socio-cultural.
The CMP-Moore Learning Initiative on Holistic Approaches
CONSTRAINTS AND LIMITATIONS
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The learning initiative on holistic approaches delivered tremendous results. Working group members remained dedicated to the process throughout, continuing to participate in convenings and make valuable contributions. This product represents an effective and valuable exchange of learning, elaboration of ideas, and exploration.
Nonetheless, our ability to delve deeply into this topic was constrained by:
Consequently, this product is relatively high-level in nature, covering important aspects of need, situation assessment, definition, theory of change, application, design and implementation challenges and solutions, and ongoing questions. Many working group members have indicated that given the opportunity, they would like to continue to develop this approach further, including development of guidelines and advancement of activities that would increase uptake.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Image source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2019/
world/amp-stories-bolsonaro-amazon-indigenous-munduruku/
1. INTRODUCTION
Background and situation
1. INTRODUCTION
Background and situation
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Women standing with her baby, Mozambique. Image credit: Annie Spratt, Unsplash
More, and better, holistic approaches are needed
A significant portion of the world’s high conservation value areas are occupied, surrounded, and/or owned or managed by indigenous and local people, yet efforts by conservation and other social change organizations in these places are not sufficiently multifaceted to attain or sustain desired conservation and human well-being aims.
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There is a critical need for more holistic approaches to be used by the conservation community and other social change sectors.
Indigenous and local people are owners and stewards of a very significant portion of the world’s biodiversity.
“The world’s 370 million indigenous peoples make up less than five percent of the total human population, they manage or hold tenure over 25 percent of the world’s land surface and support about 80 percent of the global biodiversity.”1
“Indigenous Peoples manage or have tenure rights over at least ~38 million km2 in 87 countries or politically distinct areas on all inhabited continents. This represents over a quarter of the world’s land surface, and intersects about 40% of all terrestrial protected areas and ecologically intact landscapes.”2
Needs among indigenous and local communities also are significant.
“Indigenous communities represent about 5% of the world’s population but make up 15% of the world’s extreme poor, and 1/3 of the rural poor. They live, own and occupy approximately one quarter of the world’s lands and waters which represents 80% of the world’s biodiversity.”3
More, and better, holistic approaches are needed
A survey conducted the the CMP-Moore Population, Health, and Environment Learning Initiative shows that many aspects of human well-being are seen as highly linked to conservation effectiveness, but most organizations look to others to work on them or they don’t work on them at all.
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Q: In locations of biodiversity concern...I believe the following local needs, where they exist, are critical to address to ensure biodiversity conservation outcomes.
Q: In the locations where you or your organization work, when the following needs influence biodiversity conservation outcomes, what has been your most common response?
More, and better, holistic approaches are needed
Even where integrated conservation and human well-being approaches are used, results tend to fall short.
Regarding integrated projects, a third of working group members responding to a survey indicate that conservation outcomes tend to be realized but human well-being outcomes fall short, while another third say both tend to fall short.
These views are consistent with research on past effectiveness of Integrated Conservation and Development projects.
“A number of reviews suggest that integrated conservation and development projects (ICDPs) have not reconciled conservation and development agendas, and both conservationists and social scientists have harshly criticized ICDPs (e.g., Wells et al. 1998; Neumann 1998; Agrawal and Gibson 1999). Many believe integrated approaches have failed to deliver on their potential or promise. For example, in a review of 36 ICDPs, only five contributed directly to wildlife conservation (Kremen et al. 1994). McShane and Wells (2004) provide a comprehensive account of the difficulties of integrating conservation and development at the site level. Ferraro (2001) suggests that the indirect approach favored by ICDPs of providing alternative sources of products, income, or social benefits as a means of encouraging communities to cooperate in conservation initiatives is best described as ‘conservation by distraction.’’’1
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In your experience, to what extent have programs intended to have both conservation (tree) and human well-being (family) outcomes been successful (green) or not (red). (n=23)
More, and better, holistic approaches are needed
In the view of the working group, single sector and even many integrated efforts have fallen short of delivery on planned objectives for an array of important reasons.
We developed a situation analysis to examine how lack of more holistic approaches undermines efforts to improve well-being of biodiversity and people (next two slides). This situation analysis shows:
Failure to deliver on intended impacts often begins at project start with identification and engagement of collaborators wherein conservation NGOs approach rights-holders as “threats” versus owners, leaders, and intended beneficiaries.
Approaches tend to be done “for” or “to” local land- and resource-holders rather than “with,” impeding development of an inclusive, equitable collaboration from the start.
This leads to lack of definition of a shared vision toward which all collaborators are committed to working as equal partners.
As a result, subsequent situation analysis tends to be overly narrow, failing to recognize the interdependencies among the well-being of local people and the health of surrounding biodiversity.
Implementation constraints also limit success, such as narrowly targeted or time-limited funding and unrealistic expectations of collaborators and funders regarding the time needed to attain intended impacts.
Operating environment constraints also have significant influence on effectiveness, including factors such as unsupportive or undermining policy environments and socioeconomic or even geophysical conditions that limit potential economic options.
Therefore, strategies to mitigate direct negative influences on human well-being and environmental health tend to fall short, addressing only part of the equation, and often only part of that part (e.g., many “economic alternatives” projects).
And where near-term positive impacts may be realized, long term sustainability may be compromised because the local constituency, capacity, and capital required to maintain and amplify well-being impacts have not been established.
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High level situation assessment
A more holistic approach should help to resolve an array of key factors obstructing attaining and sustaining desired impacts on human well-being and environmental health
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Broader context constraints
Implementation constraints
Adoption of a Holistic conservation and human well-being strategy seeks to remedy
Lack of shared and aligned vision among rights holders, NGOs, stakeholders
Insufficient understanding of needs, aspirations, challenges
Failure to achieve desired impacts on human well-being and environmental health
Lack of full partnership/ collaboration among rights holders, NGOs, stakeholders
Failure of solutions to respond effectively to complexity or nature of challenges
Insufficient inclusion/ participation of all key actors
Lack of meaningful, sustained change in attitude/ behavior or enabling conditions
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LACK OF FULL PARTNERSHIP
Desire for full, inclusive, equitable partnership..
Commitment and accountability of outside organizations
Ability of conservation orgs. to partner w/ heath, development, etc.
Ability of rights holders to engage effectively
LACK OF SHARED AND ALIGNED VISION
Ownership of vision by those most likely to defend and invest in it over the long run.
Shared holistic long-term vision for nature and people among (community members, government officials, locally- based NGOs, etc etc)
INSUFFICIENT INCLUSION/ PARTICIPATION
Ownership of local people over design & implementation
Representation of multiple knowledge sources, perspectives, practices to enrich and inform design, implementation, evaluation and improvement
Ensuring Justice, Equity, Inclusion, Diversity principles followed
Awareness of issues influencing/ incentivizing participation
Sustainability of participation/ ownership/ leadership of local people in conservation initiatives
Decisions made in a participatory, inclusive, transparent manner
INSUFFICIENT UNDERSTANDING OF NEEDS, ASPIRATIONS, CHALLENGES
Understanding of relationship between people and systems, incl. links between well-being and conservation
Identification of immediate needs and long-term vision of local communities and tools to meet those needs
Draw out, recognize, empower and build on rich and essential local/ traditional/ indigenous knowledge
Failure to recognise/ explicitly addressed areas of conflict and areas of convergence/ synergy.
SOLUTIONS FAIL TO RESPOND EFFECTIVELY TO COMPLEXITY OR NATURE OF PROBLEM
Creation of effective, sustainable solutions that activate the necessary synergies for long-lasting impact
Adoption of innovative solutions
Project design/ implementation/ MEL reflect the complexity of people and systems
Inherent complexity, synergies, potential conflicts, inherent dilemmas and challenges explicitly addressed
Ability of solutions to respond to meet social values and needs
Relevance and acceptability of conservation interventions
Anticipation and mitigation of potential adverse effects
Identification of locally appropriate and context specific strategies
Understanding and advancement of local people's needs and aspirations for thriving futures
LACK OF CHANGE IN ATTITUDE/BEHAVIOR
Demonstration to local communities that their needs are valued as much as the needs of the natural resources on which they depend
Buy-in of local people to solutions that mitigate threats they pose to conservation outcomes
Hope and empowerment of the people that influence the future to take leadership and ensure sustainability of the solutions/strategies/actions"
Motivation of local people to conserve based on understanding of how conserving natural resources will benefit them and their children
More local residents depend on and value healthy biodiversity and positive conservation outcomes
Creation of solutions by local people, increasing engagement and support
Knowledge, attitudes, behaviors of local people to care for nature
Empowerment of local people to manage and conserve their natural resources
Involvement, empowerment, and ownership of local people as allies for conservation, invested in the outcomes
IMPLEMENTATION CONSTRAINTS
Funding -- funders are siloed, funding term too short for this type of approach, funders don’t support integrated approaches
time horizon (getting to success and sustainability with an approach like this takes a long time - must stay the course
scale of focus is local but scale of desired impact is usually much larger
Biodiversity
People
BROADER CONTEXT CONSTRAINTS
Unsupportive or undermining policy environment
Unsupportive or undermining socioeconomic context
DIRECT INFLUENCES
Locally-driven pressures on biodiversity
Practices and conditions that constrain or undermine HWB
Detailed Situation Assessment
1. INTRODUCTION
Background and situation
2. APPROACH DEFINITION
Hallmarks, principles, example frameworks
A community conservation collective working in the buffer zone of Volcanoes National Park, Rwanda. Image Credit: Elizabeth O’Neill
Definition
Holistic approach for healthy and resilient social-ecological systems
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A Holistic Social-Ecological Approach recognizes the profound interdependency between the well-being of people and the health of the world’s biodiversity. The approach champions both of these through collaborations that negotiate and advance holistic solutions for the good of people and nature.
Such collaborations may include local land- and resource-holders, non-governmental organizations, government representatives, and other relevant stakeholders.
The priorities of local land- and resource- holders are paramount, but ultimate intervention objectives reflect negotiated solutions that support and balance diverse interests, including human health, environmental conservation, food security, economic security/ advancement, preservation of cultural values, education, and/or policy/governance, among others.
For a quick and helpful overview of social-ecological systems, see: https://www.stockholmresilience.org/research/research-videos/2017-11-27-understanding-social-ecological-systems.html
A holistic set of objectives, from the Community Life Plan for Comunidad Nativa Poyentimari, 2018-2028, a result of a planning process supported by The Field Museum's Conservation for Well-being Program.
Definition: Hallmarks
Various hallmarks highlight the unique nature of a holistic approach for healthy and resilient social-ecological systems
A holistic social-ecological approach is characterized by a set of important hallmarks that include:
A focus on a social-ecological system as the ultimate target
Inclusive, equitable collaboration (similar to the graphic at left), including considerations of gender
Interdependency between well-being of people and health of biodiversity
Alignment around and advancement of a shared vision
Honest negotiations toward pragmatic, viable, cross- sectoral solutions
Respect for local owners as decision-makers and leaders, and enabling attainment of their visions for the future (versus bringing them along toward NGO visions)
Working toward near-term impact and shifts in mindsets and behavior as needed to attain long-term sustainability, which is viewed as the ultimate intended outcome
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Equitable collaboration is a hallmark of a holistic approach, which the working group characterized in a manner very similar to the graphic above, taken from the field of education. From: Equitable Collaboration Framework, https://organizingengagement.org/featured/equitable-collaboration-framework/
Definition: Principles
Holistic approaches, as central to their nature, give diligent attention to fundamental principles that underpin all engagement, collaboration, design, and execution
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Best Gender Principles and Practices
JEDI: Justice, Equity, Diversity, Inclusion
FPIC: Free, Prior, Informed Consent
Flexibility, Honesty, Trust, Respect
Evidence-based Decision-making
Foundational Principles of Holistic Approach
Space, Security, Dignity for People and for Biodiversity
Definition: Examples
Although holistic approaches as we are defining them are not in wide use, an array of holistic approach frameworks, examples, research, and other resources exist
Programs
Frameworks & Toolkits
Research
Monitoring and Evaluation
Organizations
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Definition: Notes
A holistic approach differs in important ways from a traditional integrated conservation and development approach
The working group believes than a holistic approach differs importantly from an ICDP in that:
ICDPs tend to focus on “two buckets” where a holistic approach deals with the whole system, inclusivity, and the array of needs
ICDPs can be more focused on conservation than people, or vice versa, versus advancing interdependent objectives together
Objectives of ICDPs often are more externally imposed; holistic approaches are derived more with/from local people; this “true collaboration” aspect sets it apart
A holistic approach tends to be comprehensive in its design and elaboration of assumptions
ICDPs often have time-bound project lifespans, versus an ongoing commitment designed to last until interdependent human well-being and conservation objectives are achieved, including indications of long-term sustainability of results, minsets, and resilience
A holistic approach is possibly more akin to community-based conservation, community-based natural resources management, and collaborative conservation
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Image from: https://www.researchgate.net/figure/ntegrated-Conservation-and-Development-Project-ICDP-scheme-applied-to-Protected-Area_fig1_339104122
Definition: Notes
In a holistic approach, well-being of people and environmental health are viewed as interdependent, but opinions of the working group members differ on the nature and degree of interdependence
In response to a survey question regarding the interdependence of environmental health and human well-being, working group members’ responses fell into four clusters.
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Advancing human well-being is a means to the end that is conservation AND an end unto itself
“Conservation cannot be done in a vacuum so HWB needs to be considered AND some conservation goals may not be dependent on HWB.”
“In an ideal situation, you need both to be successful. Not all situations are ideal so you might have to have trade offs between to the two.”
“A conservation project should yield ‘biodiversity’ and ‘HWB’ outcomes.
Advancing human well-being must be an end in itself
“HWB outcomes should be treated as core-benefits rather than co-benefits.”
“HWB is not only ensuring sustainable efforts but a moral imperative.”
Advancing human well-being is a means to the end that is biodiversity conservation
“HWB outcomes are a necessity identified from failed efforts to protect areas by marginalizing the people who depend on them.”
“Without including HWB, most conservation efforts are doomed to fail.”
The interdependence between the well-being of biodiversity and of people depends on context
“It depends on the goals of the program, nature of the initiative, who it is working with and what it is seeking to achieve.”
“Well-being can be a useful catch all phrase but there is a danger that not enough thought is given to what it actually means in each context.”
“In the most degraded scenarios it is a means to an end. Where there is stability it may be more an end in itself.”
Definition: Notes
The Conservation Standards present human well-being as a result of biodiversity conservation, while a holistic approach considers both human well-being and biodiversity conservation as interdependent and equal ultimate goals to ensure the health, resilience, and sustainability of a social-ecological system
The Conservation Standards (CS) place Human Well-being Scope and Targets to the right of conservation scope, and constrained by human well-being that is impacted by conservation and subsequent provision of ecosystem services.
The underlying logic of this is that the CS are for organizations whose principle mission is conservation; human well-being benefits are therefore framed as benefiting from conservation results being realized.
The fundamental distinction between the CS model and a holistic social-ecological approach is the interdependence and circularity recognized by a holistic approach: In a social-ecological system, if environmental health is not assured, human well-being will suffer and if human well-being is not assured, conservation success is unlikely.
A holistic approach is based on the hypothesis that social, cultural, economic, environmental, and political/governance aspects must be in good condition for desired impacts to be achieved and, most importantly, sustained. Thus if any of these factors are not in a good state, as defined first and foremost by local actors, they must be advanced alongside conservation aims, whether there is a clear and direct contribution to conservation outcomes or not.
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Environmental health supports HWB and HWB supports and enables environmental health
Definition: Notes
Lack of attention to key factors that local people define as fundamental to their well-being may ultimately undermine conservation aims
The fundamental assumption of a holistic approach is that achieving a healthy, resilient social-ecological system is more like a Rubik’s Cube than a 2d puzzle. While the environment is one critical element, solving only for that while leaving other key aspects in a poor or weak state (e.g., health, livelihoods, governance) means “job done” has not been achieved, as these factors ultimately will undermine any conservation gains made.
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3. THEORY OF CHANGE
Logic, Assumptions
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A village on the banks of the Ucayali River, Peru. Image Credit: Elizabeth O’Neill
Theory of Change: Summary
The very basic theory of change is that if a holistic approach is employed, versus a more narrow or single sector approach, that will lead to both near term positive impacts for people and nature as well as higher likelihood of longer term resilience and sustainability of the social-ecological system.
The theory of change for a holistic approach posits that:
If necessary enabling conditions are established (e.g., funding and willing, interested partners) then an equitable collaboration can be formed within which relevant parties (local people, NGOs, other key stakeholders) decide to pursue a holistic approach, which leads to open, honest, and pragmatic communication regarding values, needs and aspirations such that a negotiated and shared vision can be elaborated.
Based upon this vision and the trust, understanding and communication supported by the equitable collaboration, collaborators can define a holistic strategy comprised of a suite of solutions that navitate trade-offs and respond effective to the complexity and nature of challenges to achieving a healthy, resilient social-ecological system.
Assuming that the critical resources can be found, including necessary human and financial capacity, and that the collaboration continues to work together effectively, the joint holistic strategy can be implemented that advances the holistic and interdependent set of objectives articulated within the vision.
By “raising all boats” in this integrated manner, direct threats to biodiversity health and well-being of people are more effectively mitigated, and conditions for long-term sustainability are more effective established (e.g., ownership, leadership, institutions, values, tenure), than via a single sector approach.
Attainment of objectives and demonstration of positive results contributes to two feedback loops. First, it expands understanding of interdependencies, increasing buy-in to and participation in the holistic approach, reinforcing broad participation and effective collective action. Secondly, positive results helps to establish and strengthen enabling conditions such as funding and supporting policy and institutions and in turn these advance effective collaboration and implementation.
Ultimately, this chain of results leads to a social-ecological system that is healthier, more resilient, and more sustainable than would be achieved through a single sector or uncoordinated approaches.
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Theory of Change: Diagrammatic
Note that for brevity, every result herein does not conclude with the phrase, “...better than would occur via a single sector or uncoordinated multi-sector approach,” but this is the fundamental assumed added value of a holistic approach.
1. INTRODUCTION
Background and situation
5. WHEN TO USE
Holistic Approaches
1. INTRODUCTION
Background and situation
5. WHEN TO USE
Need, appropriateness
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Living on the grasslands at the border of Georgia and Armenia. Image Credit: Elizabeth O’Neill
When a holistic approach is needed
Some say holistic approaches are needed wherever you have people living in proximity to nature, while others say some specific conditions should be met
Where it will be beneficial to attain a mindset among rights- holders and other key stakeholders of the interdependent nature of well-being of people and environmental health.
Anywhere people coexist with nature.
Where a lasting, integrated solution is needed that achieves and sustains the health and resilience of a social-ecological system (e.g., via improvements in environmental health, human health, livelihoods).
Where people identify a fundamental cultural or spiritual connection with their lands/resources, as with some indigenous peoples.
Where there is clear interdependence; where people make, or are impacted by, land-/resource-use decisions that affect biodiversity/ environmental health, and where environmental health impacts people.
Where such an approach is wanted (asked for or agreed to) by local people, e.g., local people have goals/priorities that require external support to achieve.
Where there is conflict/tension over resource use and/or pressure from outside forces and/or stakeholders on those resources.
“if there is pressure from the outside that the local people cannot control"; not just pressure from outsiders on resources, but also climate change; needed in all settings where diverse stakeholders are involved in partnership, doesn’t require conflict“
Where enabling conditions exist or can be built (e.g., funding, …) through a collaborative, holistic approach.
Where it is possible to have a meaningful, positive, sustainable impact.
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When asked under what conditions a holistic social-ecological approach should be used, working group members say:
When a holistic approach is appropriate
Holistic approaches are not appropriate everywhere; certain conditions should be met such as critical mass of those committed to the approach and a willingness to negotiate and adapt
A holistic approach is appropriate when, at a minimum:
A critical and representative mass of local parties, NGOs, and other key stakeholders agree and commit to using this approach (both the ends and means to get there).
Local residents have, or are seeking, autonomy and ownership over their future (and ideally where land and resource tenure are secured or are being secured).
There is long term commitment (10 plus years) to the place by the conservation partner (if used as a conservation approach).
There is willingness and ability of all parties to be flexible, negotiate, and compromise.
There is a commitment to assessing and re-assessing emergent needs and adapting plans.
Trust can be established and maintained (e.g., may be challenging in unstable contexts or where past experiences or relationships make it difficult to engender trust).
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“It is always appropriate, I think what it changes are the circumstances, but what is key is to follow the principles.” -- working group member
“It is appropriate where national governments have made steps to initiate regulations and build institutions for recognizing the rights of Indigenous Peoples.” -- working group member
“Hesitant to suggest excuses for not using this approach. We have some responsibility in overcoming these barriers by either acting as a backbone organization or advocating for this approach.” -- working group member
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Western lowland silverback gorilla, Dzanga Sangha National Park, Central African Republic. Image Credit: Elizabeth O’Neill
1. INTRODUCTION
Background and situation
6. BARRIERS
To uptake, launch, design, implementation
Roadblocks following heavy rains, Mozambique 2015. Image Credit: Filipa Oitavén
Barriers to uptake
Inability, lack of knowledge/ awareness, and limited will all are barriers to uptake of holistic strategies
Working group members suggest that uptake of holistic approaches is limited primarily due to inability to do so. Most attribute this inability to 1) lack of funding for holistic and integrated approaches, and in particular for integration activities and 2) to the constrained missions of implementing organizations and the perspective that adopting more holistic suites of strategies can be perceived as mission drift.
Additionally, working group members say that lack of knowledge/awareness and lack of will also are moderate to major barriers to uptake.
38
Barriers to launch and design
Initiating a holistic approach can be challenged by funding constraints and forming/maintaining partnerships and the broader collaboration, and lack of proof of concept; design is also innately extremely complicated
39
Key barriers to launch and design of holistic approaches include:
The funding landscape (considered the top challenge), including:
Lack of funders organized to receive or guide such proposals
Single sector funding needing to be combined at the project level
Lack of funding to design with stakeholders and pressure to have a solid plan before receiving any money
Lack of willingness/ability to fund long-term
Lack of willingness/ability to fund integration activities
Initial NGO partnership formation, including:
Identifying qualified and interested partners to form a sufficiently well-rounded “holistic team”
Overcoming issues of antagonism, trust, and competition across sectors
Aligning/integrating complex strategies
Limited capacity/experience of interested partners with holistic approaches
Significant transaction time to maintain
Forming the broader, multi-stakeholder collaboration, including:
Capacity and motivation of different organizations, groups, and individuals to collaborate and ‘broker’ effectively
Communication barriers and challenges
Navigating diverse representation of views, priorities, power, ability, and skills, including across and within communities
Ensuring communities and members thereof are effectively engaged and represented
Maintaining everyone’s staying power over the long haul
Lack of proof of concept, due to:
Lack of a body of data or case studies that demonstrate success
Past integrated projects (like ICDPs) not having a strong track record of success
Various specific design challenges, including:
Defining theories of change, goals, outcomes, and MEL indicators for very complex systems
Capturing and framing the nature of interdependency Defining proximate results as well as the long time-scale outcomes related to sustainability and resilience
Being pragmatic and defining efficient, impactful strategies
Fully understanding and determining whether and how to address the many important pressures (micro to macro) on biodiversity and on people that are driven by external actors/forces that cannot be overcome through local action alone
Barriers to implementation
Key challenges to implementation include maintaining alignment, staffing, community and collaboration dynamics, navigating the external environment, and funding
40
Maintaining alignment across the diversity of objectives, including:
Agreeing on prioritization of objectives and advancing them accordingly with partners old and new
Funding skewing toward some outcomes over others
Human well-being activities not clearly connecting to, or at least remaining consistent with, environmental objectives
Limited established practice for successfully integrating conservation and human well-being activities
Creating messaging that works across the array of objectives and conveys the importance of their integration and interdependence
Getting everything done within a reasonable and desirable timeframe
Adapting a complex program of work to a constantly changing context
Organization and staffing challenges, including:
Lack of staff w/ social science background
Expertise and capacity/ bandwidth of implementing organizations
Different policies for various partners (e.g. travel/M&IE, prof dev, policies)
Lack of necessary funding/ resources for implementation, including:
High and long term costs of implementation
Ability to fundraise for different parts of the program of work, and some elements getting funded at different times than others, making it challenging to move work forward in sync
Lack of focus/resourcing for specific conservation or human well-being aspects
Community dynamics, including:
The need for strong local leadership to keep project momentum going
The need for adequate and appropriate representation of the diversity of stakeholders, needs, and views
Uneven benefits capture, often by a few (elites)
Activities not targeting the ‘right’ audiences to achieve/sustain change
Low capacity or motivation of community members
Collaboration dynamics, including:
The need for effective mechanisms for coordination, communication, and alignment
Shared responsibility for implementation can lead to diffusion of responsibility
The need for enough time for integration to reconcile / broker among different views
Maintaining commitment to continuous advancement of holistic objectives
Supporting political environment, including:
Lack of political will for selected strategies
Lack of buy-in from key stakeholders, particularly those in positions of government power and decision-making e.g. regional authorities
Issues related to monitoring, evaluation, learning, and reporting, including:
Can be easier to report on some outcomes and not others
Monitoring to measure outcome/impact is weak
Limited data on effective interventions
Key barriers to launch and design of holistic approaches include:
1. INTRODUCTION
Background and situation
7. BARRIER REMOVAL
Funding, know-how, partnering, evidence
Mt. Ololokwe, sacred site for communities who live in the dry low land of Samburu county, Kenya. Image Credit: Filipa Oitavén
Overcoming barriers
The working group prioritized the barriers to effective uptake design, and implementation and elaborated ideas to overcome those challenges
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The working group prioritized the following barriers to begin to identify mitigation tactics:
Lack of funding for holistic approaches, considered to be the number one barrier to uptake and implementation
Lack of awareness or capacity in design and implementation of holistic approaches
Challenges around NGO partnership development
Lack of evidence and case studies demonstrating the “how” and “why” of holistic approaches, including showing that impact, resilience, and sustainability are greater
Within the timeframe of the learning initiative, it was possible to capture only the group’s initial thinking on barrier removal approaches. The following slides present these early ideas.
Overcoming barriers: Increasing funding
Lack of funding for holistic approaches is considered the top barrier to uptake and effective implementation
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A significant increase in funders and funding is needed if holistic approaches are to be adopted and successfully advanced. Holistic approaches require more time, money, and flexibility than single sector approaches, including significant investment at the start to ensure that partnerships and collaborations are formed and reach a shared vision and set of priority objectives that will be advanced together. Expanding this type of funding will require major shifts in donor models, including willingness to fund integrated approaches, providing larger and longer term funding, and adjusting to have reasonable expectations for results.
To expand funding for holistic approaches, the working group proposes the following tactics:
Of these ideas, the working group feels there is presently a “social change wave to ride,” in that various organizations are experiencing significant and very public consequences of not being more holistic in their thinking and approaches. As a result, programs are failing to deliver near term results and long terms sustainability or even, in some cases, realizing that they have contributed to human rights and labor abuses.
Overcoming barriers: Increasing know-how
Lack of awareness of or capacity in holistic approaches across all relevant sectors impedes effective design and implementation
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To overcome the barrier of lack of knowledge and skills in the design and implementation of holistic approaches, practitioners and funders need to:
Perceive a need to increase knowledge and skills, which could be advanced through:
Gain an initial understanding of the approach, which could be achieved by:
Have greater access to training opportunities, materials, and support, which could be aided by:
Overcoming barriers: Encouraging NGOs to work across sectors
While NGOs across relevant sectors may acknowledge interdependency of conservation and human well-being objectives, many fail to pursue effective multi-sectoral partnerships
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A key challenge to advancing holistic approaches occurs at the very start with development of critical partnerships that can advance the array of objectives as needed in the social-ecological system. Obstacles include everything from perceived competition or lack of alignment across sectors, to NGOs of different types simply not being able to find one another.
To make it easier and more likely for multi-sectoral partnerships to form in support of holistic approaches, the working group proposes the following tactics:
Overcoming barriers: Demonstrating effectiveness
Lack of evidence regarding the how and why of holistic approaches impedes their uptake, funding, and effective implementation
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Many of the strategies and tactics that are supported and advanced in the conservation and other social change sectors lack evidence regarding their effectiveness, impact, and sustainability. the working group feels that this is a particular barrier to funding and adoption of holistic approaches. Greater evidence is needed regarding how to design such an approach, under what conditions it works or doesn’t (from both biodiversity and social standpoints), the costs of the approach as well as costs incurred when such an approach isn’t pursued or when it isn’t executed well, and the potential for this approach to save money. Ultimately, greater evidence is needed to assess whether this approach indeed facilitates achieving objectives FASTER, with increased participation, local initiative, and sustainability.
To strengthen the body of evidence regarding holistic approaches, the working group proposes the following tactics:
1. INTRODUCTION
Background and situation
5. WHEN TO USE
Holistic Approaches
1. INTRODUCTION
Background and situation
7. LOOKING AHEAD
Research questions, future products
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Western lowland silverback gorilla, Dzanga Sangha National Park, Central African Republic. Image Credit: Elizabeth O’Neill
Priority Research Questions
Holistic approaches remain relatively new and limited in their application globally; many important questions remain to enhance their uptake, design, and effective execution
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Further investigation is needed regarding the following priority research questions:
*Build on recently-published MEL framework for gathering evidence on the effectiveness of community-based conservation for more specific research questions--a product of the Alliance for Conservation Evidence and Sustainability (ACES= WCS, WWF, TNC, FFI, CI, and others).
Immediate and Potential Future Products
Beyond this slide deck, further effort is needed to develop materials and publications that advance the uptake, support, and effective execution of holistic approaches
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The working group members found great value in participating in this learning initiative and advancing the subject of holistic approaches for social-ecological systems.
To carry the work forward in 2021, the group considered several options and believes it would be most worthwhile to:
Develop a guidance document
Write and circulate an open letter to funders regarding the need for increased and longer term funding for holistic approaches
Develop and provide a basic orientation to holistic approaches to CMP and CCNet and other relevant sectors and communities
“We're on the verge of delivering useful learning products to the wider conservation field. Important to follow through.” -- working group member
“This is important to [our organization], and we want this to be something that we have coordinated with the whole sector so that we have much more common ways of working.” -- working group member
“I think this was an important first step in what will hopefully be a longer-term sustained discussion. I was impressed with the group's ability to grapple with a complex topic, challenge their own assumptions, and work towards shared, conceptual/definitional clarity (which alone is a huge feat).” -- working group member
1. INTRODUCTION
Background and situation
5. WHEN TO USE
Holistic Approaches
1. INTRODUCTION
Background and situation
8. CONCLUSIONS
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A traditional house of the macua people, Mozambique. Image Credit: Filipa Oitavén
Conclusions
Holistic approaches to social-ecological systems
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A significant portion of the world’s high conservation value areas are occupied, surrounded, and/or owned or managed by indigenous and local people, yet efforts by conservation and other social change organizations in these complex social-ecological systems are typically not sufficiently multifaceted to attain or sustain desired conservation and human well-being aims. Many within and beyond the conservation space firmly believe that a paradigm shift is needed such that these holistic approaches become the norm of how we work in social-ecological landscapes.
This CMP-Moore Learning Initiative on Holistic Approaches to Social-ecological Systems reinforced the broad interest in advancing thinking, methods, tools, and uptake of multi-sectoral, collaborative programming that promotes the health, resilience, and sustainability of places where the well-being of people and that of nature are highly interdependent. Through a very ambitious and rapid-fire effort, the holistic approaches working group crafted what we refer to as a beautiful “tip of the iceberg,” including a clear definition of this approach, a situation assessment that lays out when more holistic approaches are needed, a working theory of change, thoughts on when using this approach is needed and appropriate, and identification of barriers and barrier removal strategies regarding uptake, design, and effective implementation.
While we feel that what we have achieved has been tremendous, significant work remains. In particular, an array of outstanding questions need to be answered to strengthen the conceptual and evidentiary foundations of the approach, including clarifying where and how such an approach can lead to optimal, sustainable impact. Additionally, given that the working group believes that this is an important approach that is not yet well elaborated or supported, we believe it would be valuable to build on the work we have done to date to elaborate a set of guidelines, develop and circulate and open letter to funders to encourage increased and longer term funding for holistic approaches, and orient the CMP, CCNet, and other relevant communities to this approach. We valued the opportunity to learn and think together and hope we can continue this important work in 2021. While adoption and advancement of holistic approaches faces numerous and significant challenges, ultimately, we believe the paradigm shift it represents is central to ensuring the near- and long-term good of people and nature living in interdependent systems across our planet.
8. LEARNING
Value of and improvements to this process
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A forest from above. Image Credit: Nathan Anderson, Unsplash
Learning about Learning
Many working group members derived value from the learning initiative and say they would participate in something similar in the future
Working group members’ responses to the question, “What is the first thing that comes to mind regarding the holistic approaches learning initiative?”
Masterfully managed, useful product.
Stimulating conversations at an exploratory level.
Very much needed by the conservation world, filling a big gap.
A big task! These discussions have moved the dial towards better addressing the need to include broader approaches to address conservation issues.
Important thinking across a dedicated and experienced group of participants, yet not enough time to go beyond initial discussions to sort out more complex realities
Very engaging and well thought out process that was run smoothly, involved a great diversity of professionals, and successfully gathered some excellent information.
Engaging, enriching, and rapid-fire.
Learned a lot and left with some questions better answered and many more new questions in need of exploring.
“I am very interested in these initiatives as I think they lead to very solid products and results that will benefit those working in the conservation field.” -- working group member
Learning about Learning
To improve similar learning initiatives in the future, more time and budget would be needed to enable working groups to go deeper and have greater exchange of knowledge and learning
Working group members’ feedback regarding what could be improved:
The program was ambitious, and didn't set up enough time to flesh out differences and complexities.
It's a very complicated topic and would take more than 3 conversations to really address.
We had good discussions on what it means to be "holistic" but we never got into any "strategies".
It has been a good approach to learning, BUT with those who already care, we have (I hope) a product, but until we have got the less bothered on board, we do not know if learning translates to change in approach and then change in delivery and impact ...
Great facilitation and mix of plenary and breakout sessions- it was rapid fire but the most was made out of the limited time we had.
I liked the breakout groups and activities, but it was a lot of information to digest in a short period of time.
I was hoping for more conversation/dialog/sharing of experiences with others and I don't think we had time for that.
We did not have time to crosswalk with the PHE initiative.
Learning about Learning
While this was framed as a learning initiative, the purpose--more clearly defining and articulating a theory of change for a priority strategy--necessitated soliciting participation by people with expertise in the topic
Overall, participants thought this was a worthwhile effort, that CMP should continue to pursue such efforts, and, to a greater or lesser extent, that they learned new information. A future challenge for these learning initiatives will be to ensure that they draw on existing expertise in the community while also ensuring that participants acquire new information and expanded thinking.
This process really opened my eyes to the importance of spending time unpacking and clearly defining concepts/terms within a given collaboration. Although many of us in the group come from overlapping backgrounds (and complimentary conservation worldviews), I still feel there was a level of disagreement or at least clear distinctions in how we each defined certain concepts/terms, which fed into our personal assumptions. We eventually got to a shared understanding, but it took some time and energy.
I thought it was just my organization struggling with this topic, but I guess not!
I felt that this is where I am anyway, and I want to see more folk on this journey, but there was not so much to learn personally. I suspect many of us were like - the holistic practitioners or wannabes …
[This process helped me to see] the need to shift "including" community as an important consideration or even a beneficiary of conservation action, to seeing community as the architects of their future and the future in that place.
Information and thinking was not very new, so ranked "to fair extent.” I still see many barriers to actually practicing this approach.
The discussions helped me identify my own biases and this will help me recognise and challenge them in myself and others when I'm facilitating processes.
I learned that many are engaged in holistic approaches to planning that integrates the human element. I was exposed to new ways of effectively eliciting participant feedback. I learned a great deal about the importance of identifying the correct logic for results chains.
1. INTRODUCTION
Background and situation
5. WHEN TO USE
Holistic Approaches
1. INTRODUCTION
Background and situation
ANNEX. CASE STUDIES
Holistic Approaches in action
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These brief case studies provide examples of holistic approaches to ensure the health and resilience of social-ecological systems. Beyond giving an overview of holistic approaches in action, each case highlights a handful of key lessons to support the effective design and implementation of holistic approaches in other contexts.
The cases each were informed by short presentations delivered by the project executants to the Holistic Approaches Working group, several key informant interviews, and review of relevant documentation.
Given the tight timeline of the CMP-Moore learning initiative, only a couple of days could be dedicated to the preparation of each case, so they are in no way exhaustive representations of the full history, complexity, or learning from these ambitious and inspiring projects. Nonetheless, they provide important and valuable lessons that informed the Holistic Approach definition, theory of change, and thinking around identifying and overcoming barriers and challenges.
From: Rooted! The Richness of Land and Culture, opened in December of 2015 at the Pembroke Public Library. The exhibit was a collaboration between Field Museum staff and a group of community co-curators and tells the story of Pembroke's rich natural and cultural heritage.
Holistic Approach Case Study
Lessons From the Tuungane Project, Tanzania
Meeting of a women’s community conservation-based savings and loan group in one of the communities in Tuungane. Image credit: Cheryl Margoluis
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Local village fisherman work to catch enough fish to make a living to sell to the local market in the village of Katumbi on Lake Tanganyika in Tanzania. Photo © Ami Vitale. From: https://blog.nature.org/science/2016/01/07/climate-change-health-population-dynamics-tanzania-women-contraception-environment-family-planning/
Case Study: The Tuungane Project
OVERVIEW
Project Name: The Tuungane Project
Broad Scope: Lake Tanganyika and the Greater Mahale Ecosystem
Focused Scope: Villages in the southern portion of the overall scope, near and to the east of Mahale Mountains National Park
The Challenge: “The health of this diverse natural environment and the well-being of its people are threatened by extreme poverty compounded by a rapidly growing human population.”1
Project Duration: 2011 to present
Lead Nongovernmental Organizations: The project is led through a fully integrated partnership between The Nature Conservancy and Pathfinder International
Key Collaborators: Local communities, local government agencies, the Government of Tanzania, and other NGOs including Frankfurt Zoological Society, Carbon Tanzania, Tanzania National Parks (TANAPA), and Tongwe Trust.
Case Study: The Tuungane Project
COMMUNITY-LEVEL THEORY OF CHANGE
Tuungane advances an integrated, interdependent set of activities to improve the health and resilience of families, forests, and fisheries.
It does this through policy and district-level work as well as community-level work. Community activities come together around the concept of “model households” (TOC at right) which advances the adoption of practices at the household level that support environmental health hand-in-hand with human well-being and, more broadly, seeks to increase understanding and protection of the interdependence of these.
Case Study: The Tuungane Project
THEORY OF CHANGE
In this way, the ultimate outcomes of the project are as much about changes in mindset that will influence decisions, behavior, and resilience over the long term, as they are about more proximate results regarding threat mitigation or particular aspects of human well being improvement. This focus on the long- as well as near-term is a key characteristic of more holistic and integrated approaches.
KAYA YA MFANO (Model Household)
Afya Bora Mazingira Bora (Better Health, Better Environment)
“At the heart of our interventions are the model households, where changes in behavior and resilience are measured.”
Case Study: The Tuungane Project
WHY A HOLISTIC APPROACH?
“While we could make effort to improve fisheries management and forest management (our organization’s targets), we could see we’d fail because of the major driver of rapid population growth.”
“TNC’s vision is people and nature thriving together. It’s not just something we say, it’s what we believe because of the high interdependence between people and nature. 80% of people here rely on nature for medicine, forest products, energy (fuelwood), food (~40% of food need is met by fish).”
“Education, health, development, climate change, environment, poverty...these are really complex and interlinked issues. We don’t take them piece by piece because if you advance one, you may go backwards in another. In order to attain realistic, sustainable results -- like mindset and willingness -- we need to address things in a holistic way. We believe in synergy -- 1+1 = 3. There is additionality.”
“People more readily make the connections [between their well-being and environmental health] via integrated approaches. If you say demarcating a fish breeding area is just for conservation, you won’t have uptake, but if you speak in terms of well-being, people get it.”
“We now define ultimate success as local community institutions able to manage their natural resources sustainably in support of and alongside their health and well being. We are working with people to adopt integrated thinking: individual behavior change plus structural behavior change that leads to institution change.”
Why are you pursuing a holistic approach and how are you defining ultimate success?
Case Study: The Tuungane Project
LESSONS FROM A HOLISTIC APPROACH
LESSON 1: BALANCING OBJECTIVES. Advancing a holistic set of objectives requires regular review and rebalancing to ensure all priorities are advancing as hoped, and in an integrated manner.
The project has made significant progress on many fronts, including:
Forest loss has been halted in chimpanzee habitat areas and chimpanzee numbers are stable.
Food security increased substantially in the project’s first 5 years.
Change in mindsets and attitudes, including Increased local support for the National park and of conservation and a general sense among local people that life is better
Improvements in various human health indices, including reduced maternal and neonatal deaths.
Nearly 6,000 families are volunteering as “Model Households” to model healthy, sustainable behaviors (e.g., farming away from the lake, family planning, energy saving stoves).
23 coastal villages have established Beach Management Units (BMUs) to enact and enforce their own sustainable fishing regulations.
Villages have established 51 community conservation banks to help people start small businesses and diversify their incomes.
More than 1,100 farmers have adopted climate smart agricultural practices, reducing run-off and generating an average 50% increase in crop yields.
Throughout, the program has had to continually address tensions and trade-offs, however, such as:
Ensuring both immediate needs for food, income, and health care are being addressed in tandem with mitigating systemic challenges and advancing institutional changes as needed for long-term health, resilience, and sustainability.
Balancing growing demands for land for agriculture and wood for fuel with the aim to conserve chimpanzee habitat.
Both Pathfinder and The Nature Conservancy have widened their approaches, recognizing the need to look at the complex skills and capacities that communities, particularly women, need in order to fully engage in managing their natural resources. This includes supporting girls to go to school longer and ensuring that women have diversified livelihood options.
Promoting legal rights to lands and resources while advancing practices and solutions that help to ensure those rights are used for sustainability and resilience versus conversion for near term gain.
“In an integrated approach, it can feel like you’re running well, but you can have some things moving along and other things are getting left behind. We have to balance the wheel every so often, and remain focused. So regular review against intended outcomes is needed and have to continually work to maintain integration and ensure objectives are serving one another.”
Case Study: The Tuungane Project
LESSONS FROM A HOLISTIC APPROACH
LESSON 2: FUNDING. Raising funds for specific program components is similar to single sector programs, but finding funds to support integration activities remains very difficult.
In fundraising for a holistic program of work, the Tuungane Project has determined that:
Integration requires its own basket of funding and getting to long-term health and resilience outcomes consistent, long-term, flexible funding.
Advancement of holistic programming is stymied by the the availability of sources of large, long-term, and flexible funding that can effectively support holistic programs. A founding organization of the Tuungane project had to significantly shift its role due to funding challenges.
Many funders are unwilling to take the leap to support a multi-faceted program, desiring instead to fund more narrowly defined efforts with specific near-term results.
In other cases, funders’ strategies are structured such that they cannot fund integrated programming.
Some bilateral, multilateral, and private funders have more flexibility in this regard, but private philanthropies, in particular, are more reticent or unable to fund integration activities or holistic programming overall.
To encourage funders to support Tuungane, project team members have found that:
It is important to ensure donors and other key audiences have realistic expectations that look across outcomes and to both near-term and long-term gains. Relative to a dedicated health program focused on vaccination, for example, a multi-objective program will not have the same reach or value for money, but is more likely to have more comprehensive and sustainable results in the end.
Continual efforts are needed to educate the funding community, to expand their understanding of and buy-in to integrated, holistic thinking and approaches, and in particular in the role they have in advancing greater impact, sustainability, and resilience over the long term.
Demonstrating meaningful and evidence-based results helps to maintain existing funding sources and attract new funders.
Being part of a holistic program with effective collaboration and integration among partners may lead some funders to support at least certain aspects of the overall program of work.
“Neither we nor Pathfinder have been able to raise funding for integrated programming and lack of funders for integration activities is definitely a problem. Government funding by nature is set up in silos and private foundations tend to focus and prioritize on specific thematic areas.”
“In one sense, our value for money is low. It’s a remote site and operating costs are high. But value for money also is high; because it’s so remote, there is a massive unmet need and but for us, how many deaths would have happened? How much biodiversity degradation?”
Case Study: The Tuungane Project
LESSONS FROM A HOLISTIC APPROACH
LESSON 3: ENSURING AN EFFECTIVE COLLABORATION. Success hinges not on having all possible partners involved, but on having a few key, dedicated partners able to work together effectively with one another and with local stakeholders.
Project partners were initially TNC, Pathfinder, and Frankfurt Zoological Society (FZS). Key informants attribute success of the project to the continued intensive and long-term commitment of TNC and Pathfinder in particular.
Fundamental to successful collaboration has been integrating Pathfinder and TNC into a single project team and investing in maintaining constructive and complementary coordination, integration, and execution.
Effectiveness of the integrated team also hinges on specialists in one area being proficient in the others, such that the interdepence is clear in the minds of staff and in a manner that project staff can convey to others.
Patient, honest, and attentive partnership with local communities also has been fundamental (more on this under Lesson 4). The project partners already had a number of local relationships that were helpful in launching the integrated program.
Since inception, FZS’s role has shifted somewhat, and other organizations have gotten involved in some capacity, including local NGOs, local funding entities like the Tongwe Trust, and government agencies such as Government of Tanzania units and Tanzania National Parks.
Frequent outreach to government units from local to national also has been critical, with an entire position dedicated to this role. This has included building capacity and keeping them current on plans and progress.
Involvement of this broader array of stakeholders if fundamental to both near-term impact as well as long-term ownership, sustainability, and resilience.
“Building cross sectoral literacy is fundamental. We transform a good doctor to being a good conservationist. And we ensure good conservation staff are proficient in family planning. But proficiency isn’t fluency or expertise -- it’s important for staff to know their limits and to know when to bring in the right expertise for new lines of work.”
“If you wanted to do something like this in a similar context, a designated government liaison should be the first hire.”
Case Study: The Tuungane Project
PARTNERSHIP LESSONS
LESSON 4: WORKING WITH LOCAL PEOPLE. Project success depends on effectively engaging local people in an array of roles, including as land- and resource-holders, as owners and partners, and as leaders and beneficiaries.
From the start of the project, the partners have taken intentional action to work in close consultation and collaboration with local people, to understand, listen to, and ensure responsiveness to their needs. This strategy, including adherence to FPIC principles, has been central to success to date. Initial community engagements included a series of meetings to ask about needs, interactions with the national park, resource challenges, and willingness to partner.
Work has proceeded with local communities cognizant of the fact that they are local leaders, owners, decision-makers, beneficiaries, knowledge- holders, executants, managers, and partners. Rather than a “one size fits all” approach, the project tailors its work with local community members to this array of roles.
While many said they wanted to participate, when it came to action, some demonstrated more motivation than others, and still others have gotten involved as time has passed and the project has demonstrated positive results.
In this context of remoteness, widespread poverty, and historic lack of government attention, the desire for support of any kind was significant, while at the same time, some wanted to guard against disruption of illegal activities.The project has had to stay cognizant of the power and resource imbalance that exists between the NGO partners themselves and the local people.
Ensuring effective structures for local community and other stakeholder engagement has been fundamental to ensuring appropriate consultation and broad ownership, full partnership, attainment of proximate results, and advancement toward long term institution building and sustainability.
Strengthening and establishing local institutions is viewed as fundamental to long-term sustainability and resilience and the project is increasing its efforts in this regard.
“Local people are definitely partners. We’re not there to fix them; we’re there to work alongside them to get to what is possible. I don’t see them as “leaders” because they’re not the ones coming up with the model household, doing the fundraising. But they are willing partners and for this to be successful, we need them to be 100% bought in. Our team maintains great relationships with local leaders and community members, supported by transparency and trust. Ultimately, it feels like a partnership.”
“We have created a steering committee at the whole landscape level, including representation from the region, the highest administrative entity, down to the villages and NGOs. We try to bring the big strategic questions there to ensure ownership and full partnership. And we have replicated that model elsewhere.”
“Local people are the owners of the natural resources, first and foremost. We want to empower them and build on and leverage their local knowledge. When it comes to conservation, they are partners. But in terms of benefits, the are the owners and we are helping them to expand the benefits they derive through their own management and activities. We NGOs are the newcomers and we are only there for a certain number of years. Ultimate success is transforming their mindset. When we end, they still need to be there, perpetuating, doing what we have shared with them (not what we have told them.”
“The 45ish communities are so diverse, with 5,000-10,000 people in each one. Each is very different in terms of ethnic makeup, geography, age of the community, etc. You can’t talk about the communities as a whole or even internally as homogeneous; within each one, some people will be interested in fisheries, while others in agriculture or health or education.”
“We have a lot of different mechanisms to interact with the community -- individual, community-based, district level, regional. A major strength of the program is that multi-level engagement.”
The CMP-Moore Learning Initiative
REFERENCES
Interviews
Documents
Holistic Approach Case Study
An Assets-based Approach to Conservation and Well-being in Two Landscapes
From: Biodiversity Fair in the Native Community of Poyentimari. Photo credit: SERNANP
Prepared in partnership with the The Field Museum
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Native Community Poyentimari near the Machiguenga Communal Reserve in Cuzco, Peru
AGRO RURAL
Pembroke-Hopkins Park
in Illinois, USA
Implementing an Assets-based Approach To Conservation and Well-being
BACKGROUND
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The Field Museum’s approach to linking environmental conservation with human well-being has emerged from many years of experience working both in the Chicago region and in the Andes-Amazon region of South America. The Field Museum’s approach was originally developed by urban planners who applied it to community development issues in urban contexts of the developed world.
As Alaka Wali and her team were refining this approach in Chicago, they identified an opportunity to integrate a socio-cultural component in the rapid biological inventories the Field Museum was conducting in the Andes Amazon region. Although the asset mapping methods were first used in Calumet region south of Chicago, the Quality of Life methods were first developed for Cordillera Azul National Park buffer zone communities. It was there that the Field Museum team realized that asset mapping wasn't going to be sufficient to effective engagement with communities for conservation, and took the additional step of developing these plans.
In subsequent years, methods such as working with local people to create crests representing core values, mapping key community assets, assessing quality of life indicators, and ultimately developing recommendations for land use decision makers have become central features of Field Museum works across these geographies.
Implementing an Assets-based Approach To Conservation and Well-being
THEORY OF CHANGE
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Field Museum’ vision of conservation is one in which environmental health is intimately linked with local people's’ wellbeing. Field Museum has developed one methodology for engaging communities in conservation decisions and practices known as Quality of Life (QoL) Planning—a form of rapid assessment and consensus building that draws on an assets-based approach and facilitates community priority-setting, particularly as it relates to community-environment relationships.
Field Museum team and collaborators in different geographies deliberately build a consensus vision for conservation and quality of life across a wide cross-section of stakeholders, while acknowledging and respecting the differences among the actors involved. They put local people at the forefront to ensure that conservation actions are just, equitable, and sustainable. The process helps in-country government agencies and other actors to better understand the sociocultural, political, and biological contexts in the areas they are tasked with protecting and ensures more effective protection by incorporating the knowledge and needs of local people into conservation plans. The consensus-based approach also increases the likelihood that decision-makers will recognize the legitimacy of the shared vision that emerges.
Machiguenga Communal Reserve
LANDSCAPE OVERVIEW
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Since 2009, Field Museum’s team of ecologists and social scientists have been developing Quality of Life (QoL) plans with local organizations in the Peruvian Amazon. This has been an iterative process, and throughout the last 20 years the museum has tweaked and improved these tools and methodologies with the input of local collaborators. The present case study focuses on the QoL plan developed with the Native Community of Poyenitmari, that neighbors the Machiguenga Communal Reserve, in 2019.
Objectives:
Key Collaborators: Community leaders, community facilitators and strategic allies/organisations: Consejo Machiguenga del Río Urubamba (COMARU), ECA-Maeni, SERNANP Perú, Machiguenga Communal Reserve, Field Museum, Echarati District Municipality.
Pembroke-Hopkins Park
LANDSCAPE OVERVIEW
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In Spring 2016, Field Museum staff and a team of local facilitators led residents of Pembroke-Hopkins Park (PHP) through a structured process in which participants discussed priorities and concerns, reflected on trade-offs between different land use options and development scenarios, and drafted planning recommendations based on their core values and principles. Residents mapped their community assets and assessed key indicators of their quality of life.
Objectives:
Key Collaborators: Primary partners: Resident co-facilitators of the Township of Pembroke, Illinois, and the Field Museum. Secondary Partners: U.S Fish & Wildlife Service, and The Nature Conservancy.
Implementing An Assets-based Approach To Conservation and Well-being
WHY A HOLISTIC APPROACH?
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“In general, the quality of life planning process resulted in local priorities shifting to align more explicitly with conservation objectives. Ultimately, community residents gained confidence that their way of life, which is heavily dependent on maintaining intact forest resources, could be sustained if protected areas were established and maintained.”
“In much of the Amazon, people depend on traditional agriculture, hunting, and gathering, which require healthy forests and ecosystems. In Peru, the Museum’s Keller Science Action Center staff has worked with indigenous and non-indigenous communities living near protected natural areas to agree upon key principles, identify social and environmental assets, and determine priorities for the future. This process helps people draw upon their core values and community strengths to develop plans to improve quality of life and to protect natural resources.”
“Healthy forests depend on the care and commitment of local people, just as people depend on healthy nature for their well being and conserved landscapes depend on people for their continued health.”
“In Pembroke well-being is about more than monetary income for these communities in the Amazon: it involves quality natural resources, strong cultural traditions, healthy social relationships, the ability to meet basic needs, and a fair political system.”
Why are you pursuing a
holistic approach and how
are you defining success?
Implementing an Assets-based Approach To Conservation and Well-being
LEARNINGS FROM A HOLISTIC APPROACH
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LESSON 1: FOCUS ON ASSETS INSTEAD OF NEEDS. Projects should draw on community strengths, rather than starting with problems or deficiencies. If made visible, forms of social organization, cultural practices, values, and environmental knowledge provide insights into how mutually beneficial collaboration can proceed.
Cultural strengths hold the key to empowerment for sustainable livelihoods.
An asset-based approach uses as its starting off point that people have gifts and capacities. In a deficit-model, the negative is emphasized — what they are lacking and what they perceive as existing in community areas: crime, disease, poor infrastructure– and they are “clients”, people in need of help from outside.
“Assets” can be the local history and culture of the community, skills of local residents (local knowledge), the way people are organized locally, or the physical infrastructure and space in a community. An assets-based approach is used to ascertain these perspectives.
Quality of life plans that are based on community assets tend to produce priorities that are more consistent with environmental conservation. Research and participatory methods are used to create ways for local people to discuss their resource management priorities collectively, reflect on impacts between different ways to use land and resources, and make their decisions based on their own cultural values and priorities.
Clients have needs and deficits
Citizens have assets and expertise
Kretzmann & McKnight, 1993
ASSETS vs. DEFICITS
Implementing an Assets-based Approach To Conservation and Well-being
LEARNINGS FROM A HOLISTIC APPROACH
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LESSON 1: FOCUS ON ASSETS INSTEAD OF NEEDS. Projects should draw on community strengths, rather than starting with problems or deficiencies. If made visible, forms of social organization, cultural practices, values, and environmental knowledge provide insights into how mutually beneficial collaboration can proceed.
“Need for changing the chip and convince professionals/ practitioners who are used to implementing development-style projects to try a different approach such as assets-based approach, and to create spaces for reflection and action, instead of coming with solutions from the outside”
“You will need to make clear links between challenges, threats and how to overcome those with community assets. That’s where the rubber hits the road. And this usually takes longer than expected. It has to do with factors such as individual personalities, but also with structural challenges we are not trying to glass over or ignore by using an assets approach.”
“Your partner has to be sincere and actually invested in improving the quality of life of people in the community, and not just be looking for a shortcut to achieve their goals. And they have to be frustrated, they have to have already exhausted some of the popular methods. So they are ready to try something different. In some of these places we are talking about years if not decades of not being able to engage the communities.”
Key learnings:
Implementing an Assets-based Approach To Conservation and Well-being
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LESSON 2: HOLISM. A multi-dimensional approach to well-being is central to the process and vision, based on the understanding that healthy ecosystems and thriving biodiversity underlie quality of life.
Align conservation and wellbeing visions by focusing on interdependence versus win-lose “trade-offs”.
QoL Planning have the potential to address a common problem in conservation -- when people and conservation are assumed to be at odds, both long-term biodiversity conservation and local quality of life often suffer as a result. Instead, the QoL process creates space to identify where conservation and community visions for improving quality of life overlap (see details in the next slide).
Ultimately, communities can choose to shift toward more conservation-friendly priorities. For example, near Cordillera Azul National Park in Peru, reflections during QoL planning led a group of individuals in one community (Yamino) to lobby the rest of the community to stop timber extraction and to create a reserve area where they collect seeds and mahogany bark for making handicrafts.
Key learnings:
“Misalignment of priorities (conservation and well-being) was more common between local people and their political representatives (how to resist conventional development?...), than between the needs of biodiversity and of local people, although the latter was also present at times.”
“Although not a common challenge, when priorities do not readily align the best way to find accord is through ongoing commitment to build on the trust that exists and having debates with local people in their own language.”
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Alignment of conservation and wellbeing visions: The QoL process creates space to identify where conservation and community visions for improving quality of life overlap.
Community members create a community shield/crest with symbols that represent the values of the community members and their local identity. Through this activity, people articulate are most proud of, and identify core local principles that are central to their identities. Serves to benchmark to assess the degree to which different land use and development options are compatible with who they are and what they want to conserve.
Community members produce maps of natural and cultural resources on the landscape surrounding their communities. Opportunity to assess and value the depth of ecological knowledge and the interrelationship of people’s world views and natural resource management.
Interactive group exercises in which local residents quantify their perceptions of their quality of life in five different dimensions: (1) the state of natural resources, (2) cultural practices and beliefs, (3) social relationships, (4) political life, and (5) the economic situation. After all the dimensions are ranked, the facilitator leads a conversation on the interrelationship between the dimensions and how strengths in one area could help overcome weaknesses in another. These reflections explicitly address how healthy natural resources are necessary for their quality of life, and often voiced support for creating protected areas near their territories.
Implementing an Assets-based Approach To Conservation and Well-being
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Key learnings:
LESSON 3: PLURALISM AND RELATIONSHIP BUILDING. It is essential to bring in many�partners, voices, and perspectives to get the best results.
The principle of pluralism inscribes a commitment to take seriously the cultural knowledge of an environment and traditional stewardship practices that are often surfaced through the process.
Conservation biologists and park rangers engaged in QoL Planning are encouraged to build upon the complementarity identified among these different epistemologies. Likewise, community participants in the cases outlined above benefited in various ways from knowledge and resources shared by vested conservation stakeholders.
The Field Museum team has found that conservation organisations and government agencies often cite an inability to secure local input in formats that can be effectively utilized for official policy making. Quality of Life Planning addresses this directly by facilitating the development of working relationships between communities and other partners.
Communities adjacent to the Ampiyacu-Apayacu Regional Conservation Area, for instance, expanded a voluntary community monitoring regimen in collaboration with the protected area personnel after participating in QoL planning.
“In order to build trust you have to be there, connect with leaders, connect with individuals, and start building trust in those relationships across the board.”
Implementing an Assets-based Approach To Conservation and Well-being
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LESSON 4: LOCAL COMMUNITIES AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLE AS STEWARDS.�The community is the central actor and driver of the process.
“Put people at the center: demonstrate that people are not the problem or threats, people are the solution, the owners, co-owners, and stewards of the forests and rivers.”
QoL plans are designed to be for and by the community. The community itself should lead implementation by identifying how they can implement priorities on their own and where they require external support. A major lesson learned is that implementation of priorities based primarily on outside intervention will�not be sustainable.
In both case studies, the Field Museum used ethnographic and participatory methods to catalogue local knowledge, history, and values. Participatory mapping was used to determine where and how natural resources were accessed, used, and managed. Teams also ascertained how communities were organized politically to make decisions—both in terms of their formal organization, and in practice—and to coordinate shared labor through ethnography, surveys, and focus groups. Then results are ultimately returned to the communities in follow-up workshops, and data from the workshops are included in the QoL plan. Finally, teams document the organizational structure of the community, and examine the nature of the communities’ relationships with external actors such as government offices, NGOs, private firms, and other communities. Understanding these relationships is crucial for future planning and for identifying potential allies to implement key local priorities.
“All these collaborative efforts began with requests from communities themselves, or their representative federations, to support establishing protected areas or improving their quality of life in coordination with conservation initiatives -- communities were generally committed to participating in the process, and ultimately saw long-term benefits in terms of shoring up their land rights, natural resource base, and cultural traditions by participating in these processes.” (1)
Communities can and do identify internal activities and “poquito a poquito” things start happening. It’s hard work, of follow-up and accompaniment of the community groups who are leading these initiatives. We usually support with how can they organise their time, and monitor their activities.
Implementing an Assets-based Approach To Conservation and Well-being
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LESSON 4: LOCAL COMMUNITIES AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLE AS STEWARDS.�The community is the central actor and driver of the process.
Key learnings:
“It often comes down to Great facilitation. Community facilitators serve multiple roles, it is crucial for us to go through the training together, learn from them and fine tune the process to the needs of their communities.”
Pembroke-Hopkins Park’s QoL Planning sessions guidelines:
Implementing an Assets-based Approach To Conservation and Well-being
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LESSON 5: WORK AT MULTIPLE SCALES. Working at local, regional, national levels and with different government sectors is challenging but effective for consolidating conservation impact and influence policy.
Quality of life plans initiatives elevate the needs of communities politically to increase their likelihood of finding support through government and non-governmental programs.
QoL plan development has to be part of a broader strategy for integrated territorial management that ensures local people's’ aspirations are centered in public policy. Successful integrated territorial management only occurs when local governments, protected areas, and local communities align their visions and priorities. Land management officials, government agencies and NGOs must recognize the legitimacy of QoL Plans for informing conservation and development decisions.
Since 2016 in Peru the Field Museum has worked with SERNANP, the Peruvian national planning agency (CEPLAN), the Ministry of Culture, the National Forest Conservation Program (PNCB), the Ministry of Development and Social Inclusion (MIDIS), and local governments to ensure alignment among local development plans, protected area management plans, and QoL Plans in the Urubamba and Pachitea watersheds of central-southern Peru. Currently, an alliance of organizations including the Museum is working to apply the lessons learned from this work to the Putumayo Province of Peru, where there is a unique opportunity to sustain and enhance connectivity among protected areas, Indigenous territories, and other conservation-friendly territorial regimes.
Echarati District, Peru
Poyentimari QoL plan
MCR management plan
Echarati District Local Development plan
The CMP Moore Learning Initiative
REFERENCES
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Working group members who supported the case study:
Diana ("Tita") Alvira, Andes-Amazon Senior Program Manager, Conservation for Wellbeing program manager, Keller Science and Action Center, Field Museum (FM)
Ana Lemos, Senior Community Conservation Coordinator, Keller Science and Action Center, FM
Interviews:
Diana ("Tita") Alvira, see above.
Ana Lemos, see above.
Jacob Campbell, Environmental Social Scientist, Keller Science and Action Center, FM
Lorena Lopez, Community Engagement Specialist, Keller Science and Action Center, FM
Mario Longoni, Urban Anthropology Manager, Keller Science and Action Center, FM
Ana Fernandez, ECA-Maeni, an organization that represents the communities around the Machiguenga Communal Reserve in Peru
Documents: