TITLE:
Applying Systems Thinking and Logic Models to Evaluate Effectiveness in Wildlife Conservation
AUTHORS:
Emily Stebbings, Jamieson Copsey, Vikash Tatayah, Simon A. Black, Nicolas Zuël, Christelle Ferriere
KEYWORDS:
Conservation Biology, Systems Thinking, Evaluation, Theory of Change, Effectiveness
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Leadership,
Vol.5 No.3,
September
7,
2016
ABSTRACT:
Conservation projects have limited resources and an ever expanding to-do list, presenting a significant leadership challenge. Mid-term evaluations can be informative tools to check how short term activities and resources are achieving long term conservation outcomes. This research study involved a programme evaluation of a successful species recovery project in Mauritius, using a systems-thinking approach to conservation management, and utilising a Theory of Change to assess the effectiveness of short term activities on long term impacts. This systematic method of evaluation gave greater clarity on resource planning, performance indicators and supporting processes, with observations that could be incorporated into ongoing plans. Such an approach could be used by funding organisations or by local management teams to review project performance without the need for a comparator, extensive benchmark data, nor a prescriptive management standards framework.