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Stakeholder collaboration: evaluating community-based conservancies in Kenya

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2019

Lily Maynard*
Affiliation:
School of Natural Resources and Environment, University of Florida, P.O. Box 110430, Gainesville, Florida32611-0430, USA.
Susan K. Jacobson
Affiliation:
Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA
John Kamanga
Affiliation:
South Rift Association of Landowners, Nairobi, Kenya
*
(Corresponding author) E-mail lilytmaynard@ufl.edu

Abstract

To evaluate and improve the involvement of stakeholders in community-based natural resource management, we developed a stakeholder collaboration index. We compared the stakeholders of five Kenyan conservancies by conducting 10 focus group meetings with conservancy management committees and wildlife game scouts. We used the nominal group technique to identify and rank perceptions of the conservancies’ strengths, weaknesses and opportunities, and any threats. The resulting 455 responses were categorized into ecological, institutional or socio-economic themes of ecosystem management. Collaboration index scores ranged from low (0.33) to high (0.95) collaboration, on a scale of 0–1, with a mean of 0.61. Managers and game scouts had varying perceptions of the conservancies but they agreed about major strengths and threats to conservation. The index highlighted shared perspectives between managers and scouts, which could be used as opportunities for increased stakeholder involvement in collaborative management. The stakeholder collaboration index is a potentially useful tool for improving management of environmental conservation programmes.

Information

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © Fauna & Flora International 2019
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Location of the five study conservancies in the southern Rift Valley of Kenya: Loita, Olkiramatian, Shompole, Empaash and Olorgesailie. Figure courtesy of Peadar Brehony.

Figure 1

Fig. 2 Stakeholder collaboration index comparing the mean importance scores of two stakeholder groups in their analyses of the (a) strengths, (b) weaknesses, (c) opportunities, and (d) threats they perceived for their conservancies (Fig. 1), for three ecosystem management themes. The centre point of each bubble represents the scale mean. Bubble size reflects the stakeholder collaboration index score, with larger bubbles indicating greater similarities within a stakeholder group and less variance in respondents’ answers, and thus higher potential for within-group collaboration. Overlapping bubbles indicate greater potential for between-group collaboration. The scale on the y-axis measures the level of importance of the issues, ranked by the participants from 0 (no importance) to 3 (highly important).

Figure 2

Table 1 A ranked list of the top five topics in each strengths, weakness, opportunities and threats category discussed by the direct stakeholders (managers and scouts) of five conservancies in the southern Rift Valley of Kenya (Fig. 1).