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Results webs, goal and objective Results webs, goal and objective

Results webs, goal and objective - PowerPoint Presentation

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Results webs, goal and objective - PPT Presentation

setting and monitoring design Phase III Comprehensive evaluation prioritization and strategy formulation Step 24 Pierre Ibisch 2014 Credits and conditions of use 24 Results webs goal and objective setting monitoring design ID: 777178

monitoring results design webs results monitoring webs design objectives goal goals objective setting ecosystem set 2014 develop create management

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Slide1

Results webs, goal and objective setting and monitoring design

Phase IIIComprehensive evaluation, prioritization and strategy formulation Step 24

© Pierre Ibisch 2014

Slide2

Credits and conditions of use

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design2

You are free to share this presentation and adapt it for your use under the following conditions:

You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the authors (but

not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work).

You may not use this work for commercial purposes.

If you alter, transform, or build upon this work, you must remove the Centre for Econics and Ecosystem Management logo, and you may distribute the resulting work only under the same or similar conditions to this one.  

© Centre for Econics and Ecosystem Management, 2014 The Centre for Econics and Ecosystem Management strongly recommends that this presentation is given by experts familiar with the adaptive management process in general (especially as designed as the Conservation Measures Partnership’s Open Standards for the Practice of Conservation) as well as the MARISCO Method itself.

This material was created under the leadership and responsibility of

Prof.

Dr.

Pierre

Ibisch

and

Dr.

Peter Hobson, co-directors of the Centre for Econics and Ecosystem Management, which was jointly established by Eberswalde University for Sustainable Development and

Writtle

College. Compare

:

Ibisch, P.L. & P.R. Hobson (eds.) (2014): The MARISCO method:

Adaptive

MAnagement

of vulnerability and

RISk

at

COnservation

sites. A guidebook for risk-robust, adaptive, and ecosystem-based conservation of biodiversity. Centre for

Econics

and Ecosystem Management, Eberswalde (ISBN 978-3-00-043244-6). 195 pp

. -

The

Powerpoint

Presentation was conceived by

Jamie Call, Christina Lehmann and Pierre

Ibisch

. Authors of graphs and photographs are indicated on the corresponding slides.

Supported

by

the

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH on behalf

of

the

Bundesministerium für wirtschaftliche Zusammenarbeit und Entwicklung (BMZ

).

Slide3

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design

3

Slide4

Learning objectives

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design

4

Slide5

Learning objectives

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design

5

Slide6

Outline

What are results webs, goals, objectives and monitoring design?Why do we create results webs, set goals and objectives and develop a monitoring design?

How do we create results webs, set goals and objectives and develop a monitoring design?

Practical T

ips

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design

6

Slide7

What are results webs, goals, objectives and monitoring design?

Results webs are “if-then” cause-and-effect results chains which demonstrate complex interrelationships within biodiversityThey are visual representations of a chain of change which shows direct and indirect outcomes of strategies on stresses, threats, contributing factors and biodiversity

objects

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design

7

© CEEM 2014

Slide8

What are results webs, goals, objectives and monitoring design?

Goals are the overarching conservation aims in the identified ecosystem; each biodiversity object may be allocated a goalThey are the measures which improve the status of the biodiversity objectsThey are impact-oriented, measurable, time-limited, practical and specific

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design

8

© Pierre

Ibisch

2014

The river valley and connected lowland, by the year 2030, has increased soil quality, extended forest areas and provides an adequate connectivity for all large predators and is characterized by at least 60% intact and continuous habitats, especially related to ecosystem types that are strongly involved providing water-related ecosystem services.

Slide9

What are results webs, goals, objectives and monitoring design?

Objectives support the achievement of goalsThey specifically correspond to the threats and contributing factors which threaten the biodiversity componentsThey are, as goals, results-oriented, clearly defined and measurable, time-limited, feasible and area specific

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design9

© Christina Lehmann 2015

© Christina Lehmann 2015

© Christina Lehmann 2014

© Christina Lehmann 2014

Until 2020 there are rules and laws for the grazing areas of sheep

Until 2019 there are rules and laws for the amount of sheep passing throughUntil 2025 soils have reached higher fertility (can hold more water, have higher amount of humus etc.)Until 2021 there are laws for the extent of agricultural areas

Slide10

What are results webs, goals, objectives and monitoring design?

Monitoring design is the plan for long-term control of strategic outcomesIt clearly defines method, responsible parties, timeline and location of monitoring

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design

10

Management Plan

In 2030 the ecosystem will have be in the following conditions:…

In order to reach that goal we will pursue the following strategies according to our objectives:…

Slide11

Why do we create results webs, set goals and objectives and develop a monitoring design?

Results webs = “If-then” assumptions: To detect inconsistencies in logical deduction or to identify unrealistic postulates concerning strategies

Are constructed on the basis of the conceptual model→

Visualisation

deepens understanding of indirect effects of strategies

→ Predict change that management strategies will bring to ecosystem (help building future scenarios for more effective strategic planning)

→ Enabling of managers to identify gaps and reduce avoidable risk

Development of concrete activities to be carried out according to strategies possibleIt guides timelining: Allows for identification of “milestone strategies”/ strategies which must be put into place before other steps are takenOpportunity to redesign strategy portfolio24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design11

Slide12

Why do we create results webs, set goals and objectives and develop a monitoring design?

Goals and objectives provide a benchmark against which plan progress can be trackedProvision of feasible, realistic expectations and steps which must be taken in order to ensure the improvement of biodiversity objects

→ Easy to detect and even measurable if strategies reach goals and objectives24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design

12

Ah!

First this,

then that!

© CEEM 2014

Slide13

Why do we create results webs, set goals and objectives and develop a monitoring design?

The monitoring design is the basis for learning→ Through monitoring, the status and trends of species, habitats and other ecosystem components can be followed over a long timeframe

Allows purposeful adaptation of the underlying conceptHelps to control the (desired on undesired) outcomes of a strategy to gauge its effectiveness in achieving the desired targets for the biodiversity

objects

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design

13

Slide14

How do we create results webs, set goals and objectives and develop a monitoring design?

Select 1 strategy from the conceptual model and copy it onto a new yellow cardPlace it on the left-hand side of the new results-web sheet

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design

14

© CEEM 2014

Slide15

Assess the impact strategies will have on

contributing factors/threatsTranslate the contributing factors/threats likely to be impacted by the strategy into assumed outcomes→ Reformulate them as positive

results

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design

15

How do we create results webs, set goals and objectives and develop a monitoring design?

© CEEM 2014

Slide16

How do we create results webs, set goals and objectives and develop a monitoring design?

→ Begin analysis with simple results chains before creating complex webs

Example

When the results are not direct, demonstrate the steps which would result in the expected results (bit by bit)

Educational campaign leads to increased awareness → leads to change in attitudes

and habits

→ results in the desired outcome for a biodiversity object

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design16© CEEM 2014

Slide17

The overarching goal should be

to conserve “enough of everything” for a healthily functioning ecosystem Objectives should be clearly defined and grouped accordingly to the strategy and elements/ element groups they belong to

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design

17

How do we create results webs, set goals and objectives and develop a monitoring design?

© CEEM 2014

Slide18

How do we create results webs, set goals and objectives and develop a monitoring design?

With a monitoring design indicators must be set for the meeting of the set objectives and goals related to the results webIt defines S-U-M indicators to assess the impact of each goal or objective:

Sensitive: Change in indicator values must consistently correlate with changes in the condition to be controlled, without any changes over timeUnambiguous: It is clear from the evidence and understanding that the indicator relates directly to the condition being managed

Measurable

: It must be possible to take reliable readings with reasonably simple and cost-efficient equipment or methods

If further indicators are needed (beyond the ones targeting objectives), they need to be defined

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design

18

Slide19

Transfer all indicators (including the indicators from

the functionality analysis of biodiversity objects in step 5) into a table for the establishment of a monitoring plan; for example:

Add the answers to the following guiding questions to complete the monitoring plan:Monitoring method: How will you measure the indicator

/ which

method will you use?

Responsible

person: Who will do the measurement?

Time: When will you collect the data and at what time intervals?Place: Where will you collect the data or take the measurement?24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design19How do we create results webs, set goals and objectives and develop a monitoring design?© CEEM 2014

Slide20

Practical Tips

24. Results webs, goal and objective setting, monitoring design20