Commonalities and complementarities among approaches to conservation monitoring and evaluation

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Commonalities and complementarities among approaches to conservation monitoring and evaluation. / Mascia, Michael B.; Pailler, Sharon; Thieme, Michele L.; Rowe, Andy; Bottrill, Madeleine C.; Danielsen, Finn; Geldmann, Jonas; Naidoo, Robin; Pullin, Andrew S.; Burgess, Neil David.

In: Biological Conservation, Vol. 169, 2014, p. 258-267.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Mascia, MB, Pailler, S, Thieme, ML, Rowe, A, Bottrill, MC, Danielsen, F, Geldmann, J, Naidoo, R, Pullin, AS & Burgess, ND 2014, 'Commonalities and complementarities among approaches to conservation monitoring and evaluation', Biological Conservation, vol. 169, pp. 258-267. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2013.11.017

APA

Mascia, M. B., Pailler, S., Thieme, M. L., Rowe, A., Bottrill, M. C., Danielsen, F., Geldmann, J., Naidoo, R., Pullin, A. S., & Burgess, N. D. (2014). Commonalities and complementarities among approaches to conservation monitoring and evaluation. Biological Conservation, 169, 258-267. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2013.11.017

Vancouver

Mascia MB, Pailler S, Thieme ML, Rowe A, Bottrill MC, Danielsen F et al. Commonalities and complementarities among approaches to conservation monitoring and evaluation. Biological Conservation. 2014;169:258-267. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2013.11.017

Author

Mascia, Michael B. ; Pailler, Sharon ; Thieme, Michele L. ; Rowe, Andy ; Bottrill, Madeleine C. ; Danielsen, Finn ; Geldmann, Jonas ; Naidoo, Robin ; Pullin, Andrew S. ; Burgess, Neil David. / Commonalities and complementarities among approaches to conservation monitoring and evaluation. In: Biological Conservation. 2014 ; Vol. 169. pp. 258-267.

Bibtex

@article{9bf53712a7a64cd88b2cc364d7063e54,
title = "Commonalities and complementarities among approaches to conservation monitoring and evaluation",
abstract = "Commonalities and complementarities among approaches to conservation monitoring and evaluation (M&E) are not well articulated, creating the potential for confusion, misuse, and missed opportunities to inform conservation policy and practice. We examine the relationships among five approaches to conservation M&E, characterizing each approach in eight domains: the focal question driving each approach, when in the project cycle each approach is employed, scale of data collection, the methods of data collection and analysis, the implementers of data collection and analysis, the users of M&E outputs, and the decisions informed by these outputs. Ambient monitoring measures status and change in ambient social and ecological conditions, independent of any conservation intervention. Management assessment measures management inputs, activities, and outputs, as the basis for investments to build management capacity for conservation projects. Performance measurement assesses project or program progress toward desired levels of specific activities, outputs, and outcomes. Impact evaluation is the systematic process of measuring the intended and unintended causal effects of conservation interventions, with emphasis upon long-term impacts on ecological and social conditions. Systematic review examines existing research findings to assess the state of the evidence regarding the impacts of conservation interventions, and to synthesize the insights emerging from this evidence base. Though these five approaches have some commonalities, they complement each other to provide unique insights for conservation planning, capacity-building, adaptive management, learning, and accountability. Ambient monitoring, management assessment, and performance measurement are now commonplace in conservation, but opportunities remain to inform conservation policy and practice more fully through catalytic investments in impact evaluations and systematic reviews.",
author = "Mascia, {Michael B.} and Sharon Pailler and Thieme, {Michele L.} and Andy Rowe and Bottrill, {Madeleine C.} and Finn Danielsen and Jonas Geldmann and Robin Naidoo and Pullin, {Andrew S.} and Burgess, {Neil David}",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1016/j.biocon.2013.11.017",
language = "English",
volume = "169",
pages = "258--267",
journal = "Biological Conservation",
issn = "0006-3207",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Commonalities and complementarities among approaches to conservation monitoring and evaluation

AU - Mascia, Michael B.

AU - Pailler, Sharon

AU - Thieme, Michele L.

AU - Rowe, Andy

AU - Bottrill, Madeleine C.

AU - Danielsen, Finn

AU - Geldmann, Jonas

AU - Naidoo, Robin

AU - Pullin, Andrew S.

AU - Burgess, Neil David

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Commonalities and complementarities among approaches to conservation monitoring and evaluation (M&E) are not well articulated, creating the potential for confusion, misuse, and missed opportunities to inform conservation policy and practice. We examine the relationships among five approaches to conservation M&E, characterizing each approach in eight domains: the focal question driving each approach, when in the project cycle each approach is employed, scale of data collection, the methods of data collection and analysis, the implementers of data collection and analysis, the users of M&E outputs, and the decisions informed by these outputs. Ambient monitoring measures status and change in ambient social and ecological conditions, independent of any conservation intervention. Management assessment measures management inputs, activities, and outputs, as the basis for investments to build management capacity for conservation projects. Performance measurement assesses project or program progress toward desired levels of specific activities, outputs, and outcomes. Impact evaluation is the systematic process of measuring the intended and unintended causal effects of conservation interventions, with emphasis upon long-term impacts on ecological and social conditions. Systematic review examines existing research findings to assess the state of the evidence regarding the impacts of conservation interventions, and to synthesize the insights emerging from this evidence base. Though these five approaches have some commonalities, they complement each other to provide unique insights for conservation planning, capacity-building, adaptive management, learning, and accountability. Ambient monitoring, management assessment, and performance measurement are now commonplace in conservation, but opportunities remain to inform conservation policy and practice more fully through catalytic investments in impact evaluations and systematic reviews.

AB - Commonalities and complementarities among approaches to conservation monitoring and evaluation (M&E) are not well articulated, creating the potential for confusion, misuse, and missed opportunities to inform conservation policy and practice. We examine the relationships among five approaches to conservation M&E, characterizing each approach in eight domains: the focal question driving each approach, when in the project cycle each approach is employed, scale of data collection, the methods of data collection and analysis, the implementers of data collection and analysis, the users of M&E outputs, and the decisions informed by these outputs. Ambient monitoring measures status and change in ambient social and ecological conditions, independent of any conservation intervention. Management assessment measures management inputs, activities, and outputs, as the basis for investments to build management capacity for conservation projects. Performance measurement assesses project or program progress toward desired levels of specific activities, outputs, and outcomes. Impact evaluation is the systematic process of measuring the intended and unintended causal effects of conservation interventions, with emphasis upon long-term impacts on ecological and social conditions. Systematic review examines existing research findings to assess the state of the evidence regarding the impacts of conservation interventions, and to synthesize the insights emerging from this evidence base. Though these five approaches have some commonalities, they complement each other to provide unique insights for conservation planning, capacity-building, adaptive management, learning, and accountability. Ambient monitoring, management assessment, and performance measurement are now commonplace in conservation, but opportunities remain to inform conservation policy and practice more fully through catalytic investments in impact evaluations and systematic reviews.

U2 - 10.1016/j.biocon.2013.11.017

DO - 10.1016/j.biocon.2013.11.017

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84890032419

VL - 169

SP - 258

EP - 267

JO - Biological Conservation

JF - Biological Conservation

SN - 0006-3207

ER -

ID: 98169591