In Pursuit of Knowledge: Addressing Barriers to Effective Conservation Evaluation
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Date
2011
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Abstract
"Evaluation, the process of assessing the effectiveness of programs and activities, has gained
increasing attention in the conservation sector as programs seek to account for investments, measure their
impacts, and adapt interventions to improve future outcomes. We conducted a country-wide evaluation of
terrestrial-based conservation programs in Samoa. Though rarely applied, the benefit of evaluating multiple
projects at once is that it highlights factors which are persistent and influential across the entire conservation
sector. We found mixed success in achieving goals among conservation programs; yet this result is
surrounded by uncertainty because of the quality of existing evidence on project outcomes. We explore
the role of different components of the conservation management system, i.e., context, planning, inputs,
processes, and outputs, in facilitating and/or constraining collection of data on project outcomes, and thereby
assessment of whether projects were successful. Our study identified a number of direct and indirect barriers
that affected the capacity of projects to carry out informative evaluations and generate knowledge on
conservation progress in Samoa. These attributes and mechanisms include: the availability and management
of data, design and planning of projects, and systems for reporting among donors and proponents. To
overcome these barriers to evaluation, we believe that a shift in institutional approaches to reporting
outcomes is needed, from a reflective way of thinking to a more prospective outlook."
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Keywords
conservation, efficiency, evaluation