community participation and vertebrate pest control

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Community participation and vertebrate pest control. Alison Greenaway and Bruce Warburton Landcare Research. MSI Strategic Technologies for MSPC Programme Objectives. Obj 1: Reducing the costs of aerial and ground-based control - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Community participation and vertebrate pest control

Alison Greenaway and Bruce WarburtonLandcare Research

MSI Strategic Technologies for MSPCProgramme Objectives

• Obj 1: Reducing the costs of aerial and ground-based control

• Obj 2: Reducing the adverse impacts of aerial and ground-based control (welfare,

residues, non-targets)

• Obj 3: Reducing community opposition to pest programmes (increasing community

participation in pest programmes)

Objective 3Community participation in pest programmes improved

Key Questions: Can the mismatch between public

concerns and current scientific consensus over methods used for possum control be effectively addressed through improved community dialogue?(Alison Greenaway, Bob Frame, Helen Fitt, Bruce Warburton, Phil Cowan),

Can ecological games (model visualisation) provide an effective medium for informing community participants of the economic and ecological consequences of their choices?(Pen Holland)

Partners & collaborators• Clare Veltman, Harry Broad,

Michelle Crowell (DOC)• John Deal, Nick Hancox (AHB)

Science and the public

Why do people have different views of the same problem?

Why do we do science?

Graham Nugent

Issue Complexity

• 1080, or aerial application, or all toxins

• Deer hunters: animal welfare, non-target species

• Fur harvesters: absenceof possums but blame1080

• Chemophobes, water,air, soil

Ecological Complexity

Control strategies – thresholds

0

1

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10

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

YearDe

nsity

(pos

sum

s/ha

)

0123456789

10

0 5 10 15 20 25 30Year

Den

sity

(pos

sum

s/ha

)

0123456789

10

0 5 10 15 20 25 30Year

Den

sity

(pos

sum

s/ha

)

0123456789

10

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

Year

Dens

ity (p

ossu

ms/

ha)

Individual vs population effects

Behaviour complexity

Skeptics: If you provide facts to counter their position they will often change

Denialists: Facts don’t change their beliefs

Denialists

1. Allege there is a conspiracy.

2. Use fake experts to support your story.

3. Cherry-pick the evidence.

4. Carry on trotting out supportive evidence even after it has been discredited.

5. Create impossible standards for your opponents. Existing evidence is not good enough and demand more.

6. If your opponent comes up with evidence you have demanded, move the goalposts.

Consultation

• Appreciative Inquiry • Change Lab using the U-Process • Charette • Citizens' Juries • Consensus Conference • Deliberative Method • Future Search • Graphic Facilitation • Open Agenda Conferences • Open House • Open Space Technology • Participatory Appraisal • Roadshows • Sustained Dialogue • World Cafe

A central government perspective

How do we start?Two case studies:

Trace changes in comprehension/opposition and levels of discourse around planning

Create visibility of project through social media• Where Possible places?• Who Possible communities?• What Decision(s) to get

involved with?• How Techniques to use?

Possible Places

• Waipoua: Little 1080 use but by-kill a concern

• Wanganui: Possum fur/employment/anti-1080

• Karamea/Kumara: Strong anti-1080 lobby

• Coromandel: Strong anti-1080 lobby

Possible community

• What is a community ?Scale?Participants?

Possible constraints

Decision makers have accountabilities:

• Legal

• Budgetary

• Methodological

• Time

Media to Connect

Social media tools:

• Facebook

• Online deliberation space

• Online discussion space (Forums)

• Computer gaming (Pen Holland) Wekapedia of information

?????

Issues

1. How far could/would agencies move in sharing decision making?

2. What are the agency-specificpathways of decision makingand their risk profiles?

3. What is the cost/benefit of participation versus not doing it?

4. How will results be linked with policy/practices

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