Stakeholder consultation during the planning phase of scientific programs |
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Authors: | Brett A. Human Amanda Davies |
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Affiliation: | 1. Western Australian Fisheries and Marine Research Laboratories, PO Box 20, North Beach WA 6920, Australia;2. School of Social Sciences and Asian Languages, Faculty of Humanities, Curtin University of Technology, GPO Box U1987, Perth, Western Australia 6845, Australia |
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Abstract: | Stakeholder consultation is being adopted as standard practice in the planning and management of natural resource management programs. While the utility of stakeholder participation has been investigated for the evaluation and implementation phases of natural resource management programs, few studies have examined the utility of stakeholder consultation during the initial phases of developing such programs. This paper presents a case study from a project developing a marine and coastal monitoring program for the Pilbara and Kimberley region of northern Western Australia. Via a series of workshops held in the region, stakeholders were asked to prioritise future research needs using several voting procedures. During the analyses of the results from the different voting procedures, it became apparent that there were high levels of inconsistency, poor correlation, and contradiction, between participants’ responses. Despite the rigour of the selection process used to identify ‘suitable’ stakeholders for the workshops, these results show that stakeholders did not have the technical or broader contextual knowledge about marine ecosystems to effectively and objectively contribute to the research prioritisation and planning process. Based on the outcomes of this study, we argue that project designers need to be clear about why they are involving stakeholders in a project, particularly in light of the costs involved (financial, time, resources, costs to the stakeholder) in stakeholder consultation. Stakeholder involvement may be appropriate in later stages of developing natural resource management programs (implementation and management), however, stakeholder involvement is not appropriate in the initial phases of such programs, where scientific expertise is essential in formulating scientific concepts and frameworks. |
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Keywords: | Stakeholder consultation Marine environment Coastal environment Programme development Australia Pilbara Kimberley |
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