Title: A short history of Management Effectiveness Evaluation
1 2A short history of Management Effectiveness
Evaluation
- First raised at Bali WPC 1983
- Call for action at Caracas WPC 1992
- Independent systems development (Parks in Peril,
WWF/CATIE, TNC and others, various park
management agencies) - WCPA Working Group 1996 and Task Force 1998
- Publication of WCPA Best Practice Guidelines
(2000) - WCPA Thematic Program on Management Effectiveness
- Vth World Parks Congress workshop (2003)
- CBD Programme of Work on Protected Areas Goals
and Targets (2004)
3The CBD Commitment
- Goal 4.2 To evaluate and improve the
effectiveness of protected areas management - Target By 2010, frameworks for monitoring,
evaluating and reporting protected areas
management effectiveness at sites, national and
regional systems, and transboundary protected
area levels adopted and implemented by Parties.
4Suggested activities of the Parties
- 4.2.1 Develop and adopt, by 2006, appropriate
methods, standards, criteria and indicators for
evaluating the effectiveness of protected area
management and governance, and set up a related
database, taking into account the IUCN-WCPA
framework for evaluating management
effectiveness, and other relevant methodologies,
which should be adapted to local conditions. - 4.2.2 Implement management effectiveness
evaluations of at least 30 percent of each
Partys protected areas by 2010 and of national
protected area systems and, as appropriate,
ecological networks.
5Suggested activities of the Parties
- 4.2.3 Include information resulting from
evaluation of protected areas management
effectiveness in national reports under the
Convention on Biological Diversity. - 4.2.4 Implement key recommendations arising from
site- and system-level management effectiveness
evaluations, as an integral part of adaptive
management strategies.
6The WCPA Framework
- Working group established with WCPA in 1996
- Draft framework developed in 1997
- Task Force established in 1998 with broad
regional and organisational representation - Partnership with IUCN/WWF Forest Innovations
project - Workshops, pilot studies and reviews
- Launch of guidelines at World Conservation
Congress in 2000 - Revised Guidelines published 2006
7Application of Framework
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9WCPA assessment framework
10What are the three most important things to
measure when looking at management effectiveness?
11WCPA assessment framework
12Context
- Significance/Values
- Threats
- Vulnerability
- National policy
- Engagement of Partners
The context review, although not an analysis of
management, provides information that puts
management decisions into context and allows them
to be assessed based on biological, cultural and
political information.
13What are the important values of the site?
- Biophysical
- Biodiversity
- Ecological communities
- Ecological processes
- Geodiversity
- Geomorphological processes
- Other natural values
- Socio-economic
- Cultural heritage
- Indigenous
- Historic
- Religious
- Recreation
- Tourism
- Livelihoods
- Resources
- Jobs
- Education
14What are the type and severity of threats?
15What is the level of policy and funding support
from government?
16Who are the key stakeholders and what are their
interests?
17How information is used
- Information on values/significance and
stresses/threats is used to help identify desired
management outcomes by identifying or clarifying
the key values to be protected at the site,
threats to those values and hence providing a
focus to the management of the site. - Information on stakeholders/partners and their
level of engagement is used to assess what
impacts others are having at the site and whether
more effective participation is needed or if new
partnerships should be formed to support the
sites management. - Information on national context can assist in
understanding how the broader policy and
legislative context affects management of the
site.
18WCPA assessment framework
19What is the legal status of the protected
area?
20Does the design of the site allow it to function
effectively?
21Does the site have clear management planning?
22How the information is used
- Information on legal status and design of sites
can identify management constraints (and
strengths) relating to the design of the
protected area and its relationship with
surrounding land use. While managers have limited
capacity to change these characteristics, they
can seek to overcome difficulties by compensatory
management. - Information on planning assesses whether planning
instruments are sufficient to guide management of
the site.
23WCPA assessment framework
24Has the Site got enough resources?
25How the information is used
- Information on the extent of resources available
for management allows changes in staff and
resource availability to be tracked over time. - Estimation of need allows identification of
shortfalls in staff, funds and equipment in
relation to planned management activities. More
objective estimations of needs can strengthen
proposals for funding from government, donors and
other sources of support.
26WCPA assessment framework
27Are management standards defined?
28How the information is used
- Adapting the rating system for process indicators
can provide the opportunity for park managers and
stakeholders to define the desired standards for
management practices at the site. - Rating these indicators provides an understanding
of current management practices in the light of
these standards and a means to measure
improvement in management and progress in actions.
29WCPA assessment framework
30Has the management plan/work programme been
implemented?
31What are the results/outputs of site management?
32How the information is used
- Monitoring the implementation of the management
plan or work program, which can identify where
management is directing effort and what areas of
management activity may be being neglected - Measures of visitor use or other externally
generated requirements can assist in
understanding changing demands on park management.
33WCPA assessment framework
34Biodiversity health objectives
Overview of each target and a breakdown of
status and trends of individual indicators
35Threat abatement objectives
36Social and cultural and other objectives
37How the information is used
- Information on the status of key protected area
values and the extent to which threats to these
values have been controlled or removed (the most
significant component of a management
effectiveness evaluation) - A basis for focussing monitoring programs on key
issues and information needs - Information on other aspects of management (e.g
context, planning, input, process and output) can
provide explanatory information that helps in
interpreting outcomes and planning appropriate
responses to problems identified in outcome
assessment.
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