182 results on '"community monitoring"'
Search Results
2. The sphere of exposure: centering user experience in community science air monitoring.
- Author
-
Westbrook, Marisa, Serrano-Salomón, Valentina, Pecenka, Jay, Sankhyan, Sumit, Hollo, Aniya K., Miller, Shelly L., and Sullivan, Esther
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL health ,AIR quality ,ENVIRONMENTAL justice ,ZIP codes ,POLLUTION ,AIR quality monitoring - Abstract
Community science has increased in popularity in communities where residents hope to investigate the relationship between environmental issues and personal health. This study partnered with neighborhoods in the most polluted residential zip code in the US to conduct community science air quality monitoring. We conducted 60 semi-structured interviews after two monitoring deployments to understand participants' subjective experiences of pollution exposure, their engagement with low-cost air quality monitors, and their data interpretation. We utilize the environmental health concept 'exposure experience' to analyze how participants use personal monitors, understand their data, and reinterpret their pollution exposure as a result. We further explore how participants' understandings are circumscribed by the technological features of low-cost monitors. We find that participants adopt both protective and mitigating behavioral changes based on information gained from personal experiments and hypothesis testing while using the monitors. Of their own accord, 40% of participants in this study adopted mitigation behaviors after identifying sources that impacted their personal air quality. Our analysis reveals that real-time data accessibility through low-cost monitors builds exposure awareness and enables residents of environmental justice communities to test, validate, or invalidate sensory experiences and challenge existing assumptions. These findings point to specific pathways for using low-cost monitors to support individual decisionmaking and contribute to behavioral change. Findings also identify some limitations of low-cost monitors; designers of low-cost monitors should consider how composite Air Quality Scores may encourage community scientists to equally value scientifically-established pollutants (e.g., PM) with less scientifically-established pollutants (e.g., TVOCs), without additional scientific training and health-related information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The sphere of exposure: centering user experience in community science air monitoring
- Author
-
Marisa Westbrook, Valentina Serrano-Salomón, Jay Pecenka, Sumit Sankhyan, Aniya K. Hollo, Shelly L. Miller, and Esther Sullivan
- Subjects
air quality ,community science ,community monitoring ,behavior change ,citizen science ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Community science has increased in popularity in communities where residents hope to investigate the relationship between environmental issues and personal health. This study partnered with neighborhoods in the most polluted residential zip code in the US to conduct community science air quality monitoring. We conducted 60 semi-structured interviews after two monitoring deployments to understand participants’ subjective experiences of pollution exposure, their engagement with low-cost air quality monitors, and their data interpretation. We utilize the environmental health concept ‘exposure experience’ to analyze how participants use personal monitors, understand their data, and reinterpret their pollution exposure as a result. We further explore how participants’ understandings are circumscribed by the technological features of low-cost monitors. We find that participants adopt both protective and mitigating behavioral changes based on information gained from personal experiments and hypothesis testing while using the monitors. Of their own accord, 40% of participants in this study adopted mitigation behaviors after identifying sources that impacted their personal air quality. Our analysis reveals that real-time data accessibility through low-cost monitors builds exposure awareness and enables residents of environmental justice communities to test, validate, or invalidate sensory experiences and challenge existing assumptions. These findings point to specific pathways for using low-cost monitors to support individual decision-making and contribute to behavioral change. Findings also identify some limitations of low-cost monitors; designers of low-cost monitors should consider how composite Air Quality Scores may encourage community scientists to equally value scientifically-established pollutants (e.g., PM) with less scientifically-established pollutants (e.g., TVOCs), without additional scientific training and health-related information.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. New Australian frontier in freshwater fish invasion via Torres Strait Islands.
- Author
-
Waltham, Nathan J., Snape, Natale, Villacorta-Rath, Cecilia, and Burrows, Damien
- Subjects
FRESHWATER fishes ,STRAITS ,COASTAL surveillance ,NILE tilapia ,IDENTIFICATION of fishes ,ISLANDS ,COASTS - Abstract
All continents, excluding Antarctica and the Artic, have been affected by incursion from alien freshwater fish species. Australia has not been spared. Four hundred and fifty species have now been declared on the ornamental importation list, making management a real challenge. With approximately 25 non-native species documented, Papua New Guinea (PNG) has likely some problems with invasive freshwater fish. Many of these species have been intentionally introduced to increase access to food as a protein source for remote communities or have spread naturally from western parts of Java and Indonesia, and now constitute a large biomass on some floodplain areas in PNG. The Torres Strait is located between PNG and northern Queensland and was previously a land bridge, though now under higher sea levels the region exists as a series of approximately 300 islands. The threat of further range extension of freshwater fish from PNG into northern Queensland via the Torres Strait Islands is significant, with two invasive fish species already recorded on northern islands of the Torres Strait (climbing perch, Anabas testudineus which has been continually recorded for the past decade; and recently the GIFT tilapia, Oreochromis niloticus). Here we present a case to control further spread of invasive freshwater fish species towards Australia, using a Land and Sea Ranger program, where Rangers are trained to be confident in the identification of pest fish species and to implement strategies to protect their borders from potential future incursions. The success of this program relies on Rangers to continue partaking in surveillance monitoring of coastal waters, checking and controlling for any new invasive species moving from PNG into Australian waters. We outline the biosecurity obligation under Article 14 of the Treaty between the two nations, which identifies the importance of conservation and protection of coastal floodplains from invasive species, and the spread between both nations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Evaluation of a new type of mosquito trap in monitoring Aedes in community
- Author
-
MO Danhong, ZHU Minhui, LIU Hongxia, LI Bing, and ZHAO Weizhong
- Subjects
mosquito ovitrap ,aedes albopictus ,community monitoring ,Medicine - Abstract
ObjectiveTo develop a new mosquito trap and evaluate its effectiveness in Aedes albopictus monitoring in an urban community.MethodsThe first-round field test was conducted in a well-greened residential neighborhood with high Aedes albopictus density calculated by human landing catch in August 2022, in Minhang District, Shanghai. 65 new test containers with different designs were randomly deployed in the field. These trap containers were designed by different material, color, hole size, shape and top cover colors. The results of mosquito and its egg trapping were observed and recorded continuously for 7 days. In September 2022, the second round of experiment was conducted. After comparison, an optimized trap container was designed. 140 new trap containers were compared with 140 traditional ones to evaluate the effectiveness. SPSS 22.5 software was used for statistical analysis.ResultsThere were significant changes in the outcome of mosquito and its egg trapping on the 4th and 7th day of the pre-experiment deployment of the three kinds of containers. The 200 ml container cup with three round holes in the body had the best effect on trapping mosquitos and eggs, with a positive rate of 45.5% (5/11), while other type of contrainer cup only had a positive rate of 12% (6/50) in trapping mosquitos and eggs. Statistical significant differences (χ2=45.443,P
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Machine learning to support citizen science in urban environmental management
- Author
-
Emily J. Yang, Julian Fulton, Swabinash Swarnaraja, and Cecile Carson
- Subjects
Machine learning ,Citizen science ,Community monitoring ,Litter ,Trash ,Storm water ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
Machine learning (ML) and citizen science (CS) are increasingly prevalent and rapidly evolving approaches to studying and managing environmental challenges. Municipal and other governance actors can benefit from technology advances in ML and public engagement benefits of CS but must also address validity and other quality assurance concerns in their application to particular management contexts. In this article, we take up the pervasive challenge of urban litter to demonstrate how ML can support CS by providing quality assurance in the regulatory context of California's stormwater program. We gave quantitative CS-collected data to five ML models to compare their predictions of a qualitative, site-specific, multiclass “Litter Index” score, an important regulatory metric typically only assessed by trained experts. XGBoost had the best outcome, with scores of 0.98 for accuracy, precision, recall and F-1. These strong results show that ML can provide a reliable complement to CS assessments and increase quality assurance in a regulatory context. To date, ML and CS have each contributed to litter management in novel ways and we find that their integration can provide important synergies with additional applications in other environmental management domains.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Community-driven shark monitoring for informed decision making: a case study from Fiji.
- Author
-
Ward-Paige, C. A., Sykes, H., Osgood, G. J., and Brunnschweiler, J.
- Subjects
- *
SHARKS , *DECISION making , *MARINE biodiversity , *MARINE animals , *SCIENTIFIC method , *OCEAN zoning - Abstract
Context. Globally, more than 121 million people enjoy nature-based marine tourism, making it one of the largest marine industries. Ocean degradation threatens this industry and management has not kept pace to ensure long-term sustainability. In response, some individuals within the industry are taking it upon themselves to monitor the ocean and provide the data needed to assist management decisions. Fiji is one such place. Aims. Between 2012 and 2016, 39 Fijian dive operators, in collaboration with eOceans, conducted the Great Fiji Shark Count to document sharks on their dives. Methods. Using 146 304 shark observations from 30 668 dives, we document spatial and temporal patterns of 11 shark species at 592 sites. Key results. Sharks were observed on 13 846 dives (45% of recorded dives) at 441 (74%) sites. Generally, our results matched those from other more limited surveys, including from baited remote underwater video systems. We found high variability in shark presence, species richness, and relative abundance through space and time. One trend was surprising: the most common species, Whitetip Reef Shark, decreased over the study period at eastern sites and increased at western sites; the cause is currently unknown. Conclusions. Our results can guide management and conservation needs, future scientific questions, and provide a baseline for future assessments. Implications. This study demonstrates the value of longitudinal observation data that includes absences for describing marine fauna, and confirms the capacity of stakeholders to document the ocean. It also points the direction for broadscale participatory science methodologies to track the ocean. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Adoption of community monitoring improves common pool resource management across contexts.
- Author
-
Slough, Tara, Rubenson, Daniel, Levy, Ro'ee, Alpizar Rodriguez, Francisco, Bernedo Del Carpio, María, Buntaine, Mark T, Christensen, Darin, Cooperman, Alicia, Eisenbarth, Sabrina, Ferraro, Paul J, Graham, Louis, Hartman, Alexandra C, Kopas, Jacob, McLarty, Sasha, Rigterink, Anouk S, Samii, Cyrus, Seim, Brigitte, Urpelainen, Johannes, and Zhang, Bing
- Subjects
Humans ,Conservation of Natural Resources ,Ecosystem ,Research Design ,Environmental Policy ,Community Participation ,common pool resources ,community monitoring ,institutional adoption ,meta-analysis ,multisite trial ,Clinical Research - Abstract
Pervasive overuse and degradation of common pool resources (CPRs) is a global concern. To sustainably manage CPRs, effective governance institutions are essential. A large literature has developed to describe the institutional design features employed by communities that successfully manage their CPRs. Yet, these designs remain far from universally adopted. We focus on one prominent institutional design feature, community monitoring, and ask whether nongovernmental organizations or governments can facilitate its adoption and whether adoption of monitoring affects CPR use. To answer these questions, we implemented randomized controlled trials in six countries. The harmonized trials randomly assigned the introduction of community monitoring to 400 communities, with data collection in an additional 347 control communities. Most of the 400 communities adopted regular monitoring practices over the course of a year. In a meta-analysis of the experimental results from the six sites, we find that the community monitoring reduced CPR use and increased user satisfaction and knowledge by modest amounts. Our findings demonstrate that community monitoring can improve CPR management in disparate contexts, even when monitoring is externally initiated rather than homegrown. These findings provide guidance for the design of future programs and policies intended to develop monitoring capabilities in communities. Furthermore, our harmonized, multisite trial provides sustainability science with a new way to study the complexity of socioecological systems and builds generalizable insights about how to improve CPR management.
- Published
- 2021
9. Paired passive acoustic and gillnet sampling reveal the utility of bioacoustics for monitoring fish populations in a turbid estuary.
- Author
-
Souza Jr, P M, Olsen, Z, and Brandl, S J
- Subjects
- *
BIOACOUSTICS , *FISH populations , *ESTUARIES , *ACOUSTIC emission testing , *SOUND pressure , *FISH communities , *FISH diversity , *FISHING villages - Abstract
Estuaries worldwide provide critical habitat to many ecologically and socioeconomically important fish species. However, the high turbidity and strong environmental gradients inherent to many estuaries make the monitoring of fish populations a challenging task. To assess the health and diversity of local fish populations, resource managers often employ fisheries-independent sampling methods, which result in valuable population assessments, but suffer from low-temporal resolution and high rates of mortality. Passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) provides a near-continuous, non-invasive means for monitoring soniferous fish activity over extended periods, but its utility for quantifying entire fish communities is largely untested, especially in turbid estuaries. Here, we use synchronized acoustic and gillnet sampling at 51 locations in the Mission-Aransas Estuary (TX), across two sampling seasons to test correlations between acoustic indices and gillnet catch. Positive correlations were observed between gillnet catch and sound pressure levels in both broadband (50–22050 Hz) and low-frequency (50–2500 Hz) bands. Additionally, sciaenid calling activity was positively correlated with sciaenid catch during the spring, when most spawning activity occurs. Our results indicate that PAM can be used to monitor the relative abundances of fish in Gulf of Mexico estuaries and beyond, although this is subject to species identity and seasonal dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The role of Indigenous Peoples and local communities in assessment of forest condition, pressures and conservation actions at key forest sites in tropical Asia and New Guinea.
- Author
-
CROWE, O., CROSBY, M., DE LA PAZ, M. B. E., DE LA ROSA JR, G. E., GOWAE, G. Y., GURUNG, H., KUMPEL, N., HANI, T., LEE, E. L., PANOPIO, J. K., PERUMAL, B., QUIMPO, J. D. G., RESURRECCION, N. A., SATYAL, P., SIMKINS, A. T., THOMAS, J., WIDYANTO, A., and YEAP, C. A.
- Subjects
TROPICAL forests ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,FOREST biodiversity ,COMMUNITY forests ,FOREST monitoring ,IMPORTANT bird areas - Abstract
Copyright of International Forestry Review is the property of Commonwealth Forestry Association and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Filling global gaps in monitoring data with local knowledge.
- Author
-
Castello, Leandro
- Subjects
LOCAL knowledge ,FRESHWATER biodiversity ,SMALL-scale fisheries ,TRADITIONAL ecological knowledge ,SCIENTIFIC knowledge ,FISHERIES ,MARINE resource management ,SCIENTIFIC method - Abstract
Whereas rule compliance depends on various factors, an institutional analysis suggested that fishers tend to comply with rules in the arapaima management system because they trust and understand the count data: 'fishers might well question ... data derived from computer calculations showing the same trends' (Castello et al., [24]). Keywords: citizen-science; community monitoring; conservation; data-poor; developing nations; knowledge co-production; local knowledge; resource assessment; traditional ecological knowledge; tropics EN citizen-science community monitoring conservation data-poor developing nations knowledge co-production local knowledge resource assessment traditional ecological knowledge tropics 423 430 8 05/05/23 20230501 NES 230501 INTRODUCTION Conservation places much value on biological monitoring data, i.e. data collected using standardized protocols over time or space on the abundance, biomass or rates of use of taxa or resources. It found that expert fishers could differentiate subtle cues among many surfacing arapaima, and it proposed a standardized protocol to count arapaima (Castello, [19]). [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Adopt a Lake: Successfully Tracking Harmful Cyanobacterial Blooms in Canadian Surface Waters Through Citizen Science
- Author
-
Dana F. Simon, Gabriel Munoz, Quoc Tuc Dinh, Sung Vo Duy, Kat Kavanagh, Robert Smith, Barry Husk, and Sébastien Sauvé
- Subjects
citizen science ,harmful cyanobacterial blooms ,water quality ,cyanotoxins ,community monitoring ,Science - Abstract
The proliferation of harmful waterborne cyanobacterial algal blooms, some of which can produce potent toxins, poses severe risks to environmental and human health. Academic and governmental monitoring efforts may be constrained by budget, time, and staff, and thus miss otherwise significant pollution events. Here, we report on the implementation of a citizen science project to track harmful cyanobacterial blooms in lakes and waterways across Canada. Through both crowdsourcing and crowdfunding, the Adopt a Lake (Adopt a Lake 2022) campaign aimed to document the potential presence of cyanobacteria and toxins with the assistance of participants, thus improving public awareness of the issue of water quality preservation. Using social media, participants were encouraged to participate in the initiative by collecting samples during a bloom from a nearby pond or by making a financial contribution to support the initiative. Adopt a Lake benefitted from the analytical platform of Algal Blooms Treatment, Risk Assessment, Predictions, and Prevention (ATRAPP), a research project focused on the prediction and management of harmful cyanobacterial blooms. The presence of cyanotoxins, which can confirm whether a lake has a toxic bloom, was determined through high-resolution mass spectrometry analyses. This paper presents an overview of the implementation of the Adopt a Lake initiative, the campaign’s status, and the lessons learned, and it argues the importance of continual monitoring of cyanobacterial blooms.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Adopt a Lake: Successfully Tracking Harmful Cyanobacterial Blooms in Canadian Surface Waters Through Citizen Science.
- Author
-
Simon, Dana F., Munoz, Gabriel, Dinh, Quoc Tuc, Duy, Sung Vo, Kavanagh, Kat, Smith, Robert, Husk, Barry, and Sauvé, Sébastien
- Subjects
- *
CYANOBACTERIAL blooms , *CITIZEN science , *CROWDSOURCING , *WATER quality , *CYANOBACTERIAL toxins , *HIGH resolution imaging - Abstract
The proliferation of harmful waterborne cyanobacterial algal blooms, some of which can produce potent toxins, poses severe risks to environmental and human health. Academic and governmental monitoring efforts may be constrained by budget, time, and staff, and thus miss otherwise significant pollution events. Here, we report on the implementation of a citizen science project to track harmful cyanobacterial blooms in lakes and waterways across Canada. Through both crowdsourcing and crowdfunding, the Adopt a Lake (Adopt a Lake 2022) campaign aimed to document the potential presence of cyanobacteria and toxins with the assistance of participants, thus improving public awareness of the issue of water quality preservation. Using social media, participants were encouraged to participate in the initiative by collecting samples during a bloom from a nearby pond or by making a financial contribution to support the initiative. Adopt a Lake benefitted from the analytical platform of Algal Blooms Treatment, Risk Assessment, Predictions, and Prevention (ATRAPP), a research project focused on the prediction and management of harmful cyanobacterial blooms. The presence of cyanotoxins, which can confirm whether a lake has a toxic bloom, was determined through high-resolution mass spectrometry analyses. This paper presents an overview of the implementation of the Adopt a Lake initiative, the campaign's status, and the lessons learned, and it argues the importance of continual monitoring of cyanobacterial blooms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Multi-level change strategies for health: learning from people-centered advocacy in Uganda.
- Author
-
Bailey, Angela and Mujune, Vincent
- Subjects
- *
EVALUATION of medical care , *HEALTH services accessibility , *STRATEGIC planning , *JOB absenteeism , *HEALTH risk assessment , *PUBLIC administration , *COMMUNITY health services , *CONSUMER activism , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *QUALITY assurance , *BUDGET , *GOVERNMENT aid , *PUBLIC officers , *SOCIAL responsibility , *EMPLOYEE participation in management - Abstract
Background: The paper analyzes how the Accountability Can Transform Health (ACT Health) program activated bottom-up citizen action to secure government responses and more accountable health services in Uganda. The ACT Health program had two phases—Phase 1 focused on a community-level intervention studied with a randomized control trial, and Phase 2 supported citizen-led advocacy targeting government officials across multiple levels. The focus of this paper is an analysis of Phase 2, when the "people-centered advocacy" approach supported almost 400 community advocates representing 98 health facilities to organize, identify joint advocacy priorities, directly monitor health services, and collaborate on health advocacy campaigns in 18 districts. Most district campaigns focused on the complex, power-laden issue of health worker absenteeism. With a few notable exceptions, iterative cycles of engagement between citizens and the state across multiple levels are infrequently discussed in the formal literature on health accountability. Methods: This paper is based on a comparative, inductive, practitioner-led analysis of program monitoring data from 18 multi-level health advocacy campaigns. The findings emerge from analysis of a "Heat Map," capturing grounded accounts of government responses to community-led advocacy. Results: Officials in eight out of 18 districts fulfilled or surpassed commitments made to community advocates. Government responses included: increased monitoring, more downward accountability, countering backlash against advocates, applying sanctions for absent health workers, and increased budget allocations. Advocates' bottom-up advocacy worked in part through triggering top-down responses and activating governmental checks and balances. Conclusions: Methodologically, this article demonstrates the value of analyzing process monitoring and program data to understand outcomes from direct engagement between citizens and the state to improve health services. Survey-based research methods and quantitative analysis may fail to capture signs of government responsiveness and relational outcomes (such as subtle signs of shifting power dynamics) many hope to see from citizen-led accountability efforts. Practitioners' perspectives on how accountability for health emerges in practice are important correctives to much positivist research on accountability, which has a tendency to ignore the complex dynamics and processes of building citizen power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Multi-level change strategies for health: learning from people-centered advocacy in Uganda
- Author
-
Bailey, Angela and Mujune, Vincent
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Citizen monitoring in environmental disclosure : An economics perspective
- Author
-
Strömberg, Per M., Bali Swain, Ranjula, Strömberg, Per M., and Bali Swain, Ranjula
- Abstract
Criticism is mounting that market-led and state-led initiatives for environmental impact disclosure are too limited in scope and that they rest on too strong assumptions about the quality and impartiality of monitoring and enforcement, with resulting insufficient effect on environmental sustainability. It has been proposed that citizen monitoring may contribute to counteract this void. However, to our knowledge, policy analysis in general and economics in particular has not paid much attention to this role of citizen monitoring. This paper aims to bridge that gap from an economics lens, by exploring the dynamics of disclosing local environmental impact and the potential role of citizen monitoring in environmental policy. To this end, the paper addresses monopolistic versus pluralistic environmental disclosure, letting citizen monitoring represent the latter. The study uses the mining industry as an illustrative case, because of that sector's particular transparency challenges in international value chains, typically with strong negative local environmental impact. It is shown how pluralistic information provision such as citizen monitoring can contribute to incentivizing more reliable information provision, especially in countries with weak state institutions, which is particularly important in the case of high-risk environmental impact. The findings should be of use for shaping environmental policy, providing valuable insights for both policymakers and scholars.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The Community Penalties in the Jordanian Criminal Law: What are the Alternatives to Liberty-Depriving Penalties?
- Author
-
Al-Billeh, Tareq and Issa, Hamzeh Abu
- Subjects
PUNISHMENT ,HUMILIATION ,COMMUNITIES ,PRISON overcrowding ,CRIMINAL courts ,COMMUNITY services - Abstract
The article deals with community penalties as one of the modern and alternative penalties to liberty-depriving penalties because of their importance in achieving a balance between restraint and deterrence on the one hand against reform and rehabilitation on the other hand in addition to demonstrating the importance of these community penalties in addressing the problem of prison overcrowding and reducing financial costs on the state in addition to stating at the legal impact of the amendments made to the Jordanian Penal Code of 2022 regarding the community penalties. In fact, the liberty-negative penalty causes the prisoner to feel a number of negative psychological feelings such as social humiliation, so that the research problem is to address those community penalties through demonstrating the concept of community service and monitoring the community via electronic means, the prohibition of the convict from going to specific places for a specific period of time as one of the alternatives to penalties depriving of liberty and the extent of the application of those penalties in the judicial rulings issued by the criminal courts in Jordan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
18. Coupling paraecology and hunter GPS self‐follows to quantify village bushmeat hunting dynamics across the landscape scale.
- Author
-
Froese, Graden Z. L., Ebang Mbélé, Alex, Beirne, Christopher, Atsame, Lucie, Bayossa, Charlottte, Bazza, Blaise, Bidzime Nkoulou, Martine, Dzime N'noh, Sylvain, Ebeba, Jovin, Edzidzie, Jocelin, Ekazama Koto, Serge, Imbomba, Serge, Mandomobo Mapio, Edouard, Mandou Mabouanga, Hervé Gildas, Mba Edang, Edouard, Landry Metandou, Jonas, Mossindji, Clotaire, Ngoboutseboue, Irma, Nkwele, Christ, and Nzemfoule, Eric
- Subjects
- *
BUSHMEAT hunting , *EMPLOYEE participation in management , *ANIMAL species , *VILLAGES , *HUNTERS , *COMMUNITIES , *TROPHIC cascades - Abstract
Hunting for bushmeat represents a complex social–ecological system ill‐suited to top‐down management. Community participatory management is an alternative approach with increasing support for both ethical and pragmatic reasons. Key to a community approach is long‐term monitoring: this can both catalyse local ownership of and cohesion around management and is necessary to assess the effects of interventions and make changes as needed through adaptive management. Yet community‐driven methods to monitor hunting remain underdeveloped: they often fail to account for sampling bias and do not incorporate space in a thorough way, and data are not communally analysed to simulate effects of potential management decisions. We created a novel community bushmeat monitoring programme to address these gaps across 20 villages in north‐eastern Gabon. Paraecologists conducted standardised monitoring of bushmeat, and hundreds of hunters conducted GPS self‐follows mapping village hunting catchments. We integrated these data to estimate the proportion of bushmeat sampled and make robust extrapolations of total offtake across space and time, estimating an annual offtake of ~30,000 animals of >56 species across all villages. Here, we present our approach and data—and apply them through a case study of six sympatric duiker species—to inform new directions for social–ecological bushmeat research and management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. A força comunitária indígena: reflexões com os Xakriabá no Brasil em tempos de Covid-19
- Author
-
Rebeca Cássia Andrade, Ana Maria R. Gomes, and Marden Barbosa de Campos
- Subjects
pandemic ,community monitoring ,health ,indigenous peoples ,xakriabá ,French literature - Italian literature - Spanish literature - Portuguese literature ,PQ1-3999 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
The article presents the first year of the pandemic in the Brazilian scenario in dialogue and action with indigenous peoples. The constant deconstruction of public policies and repeated aggressions against minorities in the country are aggravated by the displacements caused by Covid19. In view of this difficult context, we present a reflection on our experience with the Xakriabá indigenous people. We aim to contribute to the understanding of the processes to which we are all submitted in order to seek alliances capable of offering us alternatives and directions to face such a situation.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Towards the Development of a Sensor Educational Toolkit to Support Community and Citizen Science.
- Author
-
Collier-Oxandale, Ashley, Papapostolou, Vasileios, Feenstra, Brandon, Der Boghossian, Berj, and Polidori, Andrea
- Subjects
- *
AIR quality management , *COMMUNITY support , *COMMUNITIES , *CITIZEN science , *EDUCATIONAL planning , *EDUCATIONAL support - Abstract
As air quality sensors increasingly become commercially available, a deeper consideration of their usability and usefulness is needed to ensure effective application by the public. Much of the research related to sensors has focused on data quality and potential applications. While this information is important, a greater understanding of users' experience with sensors would provide complementary information. Under a U.S. EPA-funded Science to Achieve Results grant awarded to the South Coast Air Quality Management District in California, titled "Engage, Educate, and Empower California Communities on the Use and Applications of Low-Cost Air Monitoring Sensors", approximately 400 air quality sensors were deployed with 14 California communities. These communities received sensors and training, and they participated in workshops. Widely varying levels of sensor installation and engagement were observed across the 14 communities. However, despite differences between communities (in terms of participation, demographics, and socioeconomic factors), many participants offered similar feedback on the barriers to sensor use and strategies leading to successful sensor use. Here, we assess sensor use and participant feedback, as well as discuss the development of an educational toolkit titled "Community in Action: A Comprehensive Toolkit on Air Quality Sensors". This toolkit can be leveraged by future community and citizen science projects to develop networks designed to collect air quality information that can help reduce exposure to and the emissions of pollutants, leading to improved environmental and public health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Acceptability of Community Saliva Testing in Controlling the COVID-19 Pandemic: Lessons Learned from Two Case Studies in Nursing Homes and Schools.
- Author
-
Pétré, Benoit, Paridans, Marine, Gillain, Nicolas, Husson, Eddy, Donneau, Anne-Françoise, Dardenne, Nadia, Breuer, Christophe, Michel, Fabienne, Dandoy, Margaux, Bureau, Fabrice, Gillet, Laurent, Leclercq, Dieudonné, and Guillaume, Michèle
- Subjects
- *
SALIVA analysis , *DROOLING , *NURSING schools , *COVID-19 pandemic , *NURSING care facilities , *NURSING home patients - Abstract
Current public health debate centers on COVID-19 testing methods and strategies. In some communities, high transmission risk may justify routine testing, and this requires test methods that are safe and efficient for both patients and the administrative or health-care workers administering them. Saliva testing appears to satisfy those criteria. There is, however, little documentation on the acceptability of this method among beneficiaries. This article presents the lessons learned from a pilot study on the use of saliva testing for routine screening of nursing home and secondary school personnel in Wallonia (the French-speaking part of Belgium), conducted in December 2020 to April 2021, respectively. Administrators at the facilities in question seemed to think highly of saliva testing and wished to continue it after the pilot study was over. This result reinforces the criteria (the noninvasive aspect, in particular) supporting a key role for saliva testing in monitoring community spread of the virus. Nevertheless, wider-scale deployment of this particular method will only be possible if the testing strategy as a whole takes a health promotion approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Methodological roadmap for the development of communal monitoring of microbasins. Case study: Río Frío
- Author
-
Alix Estela Yusara Contreras Gómez and Hanz Muller Rueda
- Subjects
community monitoring ,water quality ,water basin ,sustainability ,Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
This document generally describes relevant aspects for the establishment of community monitoring in a river basin, establishing the importance of actively including the main actors related to the water system in order to make territories and ecosystems sustainable. This work contemplates a review of community monitoring models applied to hydrographic basins at the national and international level with the objective of identifying the fundamental elements for the establishment of the route or steps for the development of community monitoring in micro-basins, taking Rio Frío as a reference. The established route starts from the formation of a team led by the community that lives in the area of direct influence of the micro-basin and other interested parties such as environmental authorities, public service operators (aqueduct and sewerage), academic community (experts), and environmental organizations, who will be in charge of building the ecosystem context, identifying problems, planning and executing monitoring and managing the knowledge acquired to achieve sanitation and sustainability of the resource.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Community hydric monitoring: homegrown knowledge as local and environmental defense in Argentina, Peru and Colombia
- Author
-
Astrid Ulloa, Julieta Godfrid, Gerardo Damonte, Catalina Quiroga, and Ana Paula López
- Subjects
water ,knowledge asymmetries ,local knowledge ,mining contexts ,socio-environmental inequality ,community monitoring ,Social Sciences ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
The expansion of large- scale mining projects in Latin America has led to the application of several different institutional and business-endorsed water monitoring systems. These have attempted to deal with their vast environmental consequences. The methods are based on the devaluation of other forms of knowledge. As a response to this tendency, community hydric monitoring (MHC in Spanish) has been proposed in order to empower community-based knowledge. Alternative forms of knowledge are seen as useful ways of illuminating the impact of mining on water supplies. Likewise, communities have been active in developing connections with Academia, NGO´s and social organizations to promote a meaningful dialogue with conventional technical paradigms. These exchanges aim to generate counter-narratives about water quality, as well as to develop a defense strategy against mining. Here we focus on the research done between 2018 and 2020 in Argentina (Veladero), Peru (Antapaccay- Expansión Tintaya) and Colombia (Cerrejón). In all these cases, the local population has developed its own MHC, based on local knowledge about water. We analyze the information asymmetries resulting from socio-environmental inequality and we advocate for a wider discussion which incorporates community-generated knowledge, and more diverse and comprehensive approaches to understanding, knowing and relating to water and to local conditions.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Learnings from Health Behavioural Survey Practices in France and Belgium During the First COVID-19 Stay-at-Home Order
- Author
-
Pétré B, Kirkove D, de Andrade V, Crozet C, Toro-Arrocet D, Margat A, and Gagnayre R
- Subjects
pandemic ,covid 19 ,community monitoring ,preventive health behavior ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Benoit Pétré,1 Delphine Kirkove,1 Vincent de Andrade,2 Cyril Crozet,2 Daniela Toro-Arrocet,2 Aurore Margat,2 Rémi Gagnayre2 1Department of Public Health, University of Liege, Liège, Belgium; 2Education and Health Practices Laboratory, UR 3412, UFR Santé Médecine Biologie Humaine, Sorbonne Paris-Nord University, Bobigny, FranceCorrespondence: Benoit PétréDepartment of Public Health, University of Liège, Quartier Hôpital, Avenue Hippocrate 13 (B23), Liège, 4000, BelgiumTel +32 4 366 2505Email benoit.petre@uliege.beAbstract: The COVID-19 pandemic has compelled public authorities to establish preventive measures involving individual behaviour modification strategies (mask-wearing, social distancing, etc.) with a view to community protection. In this context, documenting people’s behaviour changes, the impact of public health measures, and individuals’ knowledge, motivations, and beliefs – even their perception of how the crisis is being managed – is essential for understanding the experience of the population and adapting the management approach accordingly. This article presents findings and lessons on how to monitor a population’s behaviour during a crisis, obtained by reviewing forty-five surveys conducted in Belgium and France during the first Covid-19 stay-at-home order, from April to May 2020. The central message is to argue that the citizens’ role in this type of survey – and in managing the crisis, more generally – should be reconsidered by thinking of them as true health partners and members of a community that could be mobilised to help.Keywords: pandemic, covid 19, community monitoring, preventive health behavior
- Published
- 2021
25. A força comunitária indígena: reflexões com os Xakriabá no Brasil em tempos de Covid-19.
- Author
-
Cássia Andrade, Rebeca, Gomes, Ana Maria R., and Barbosa de Campos, Marden
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,PANDEMICS ,GOVERNMENT policy ,AGGRESSION (Psychology) ,DECONSTRUCTION - Abstract
Copyright of Confluenze. Rivista di Studi Iberoamericani is the property of Universita di Bologna, Dipartimento di Lingue, Letterature e Culture Moderne and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The value of adding black carbon to community monitoring of particulate matter.
- Author
-
Sugrue, Rebecca A., Preble, Chelsea V., Butler, James D.A., Redon-Gabel, Alaia J., Marconi, Pietro, Shetty, Karan D., Hill, Lee Ann L., Amezcua-Smith, Audrey M., Lukanov, Boris R., and Kirchstetter, Thomas W.
- Abstract
Low-cost particulate matter (PM) sensors are increasingly used by researchers, public health agencies, and the public to measure spatial and temporal variations in air pollution, which can inform strategies for community air pollution reduction. While low-cost PM sensors provide a valuable measure of harmful fine particulate matter (PM 2.5), a significant portion of ambient PM 2.5 is typically the secondary product of air pollution emitted by varied sources outside of community boundaries. In contrast, concentrations of black carbon (BC), a component of PM 2.5 , are directly emitted by a few specific sources, such as diesel engines within communities. Motivated by community organizations seeking to understand persistent sources of local pollution, this study deployed a suite of custom-built BC sensors alongside a network of low-cost PM sensors for four weeks in two seasons at 50 stationary locations in the adjacent cities of Richmond, North Richmond, and San Pablo, California, east of the San Francisco Bay. Concentrations of BC varied more than PM 2.5 both temporally and spatially. Monthly network-average BC was 3 × higher in winter than late spring, while PM 2.5 was only 10% lower. In both seasons, average PM 2.5 concentrations at two-thirds of sites were within ±10% of the network average, whereas two-thirds of sites had BC levels outside of ±10% of the network-average concentration. The most and least polluted locations were more persistent across seasons for BC than PM 2.5 , and the temporal dynamics of BC at these sites were similar, signifying that they are impacted by the same emission sources. Together, these spatiotemporal trends show that BC is a better indicator of the proximity and activity of local pollution sources than PM 2.5. Thus, including BC in addition to PM 2.5 in community monitoring networks can provide additional insights about local sources of air pollution. [Display omitted] • BC and PM sensors deployed 4 weeks in 2 seasons at 50 sites in an environmental justice community. • Greater spatiotemporal heterogeneity and location persistence of BC compared to PM 2.5 • BC more informative than PM 2.5 of proximity and activity of local emission sources. • Recommend measuring PM 2.5 plus BC for insights to community air protection plans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Ecosystem Services
- Author
-
Balvanera, Patricia, Quijas, Sandra, Karp, Daniel S., Ash, Neville, Bennett, Elena M., Boumans, Roel, Brown, Claire, Chan, Kai M. A., Chaplin-Kramer, Rebecca, Halpern, Benjamin S., Honey-Rosés, Jordi, Kim, Choong-Ki, Cramer, Wolfgang, Martínez-Harms, Maria José, Mooney, Harold, Mwampamba, Tuyeni, Nel, Jeanne, Polasky, Stephen, Reyers, Belinda, Roman, Joe, Turner, Woody, Scholes, Robert J., Tallis, Heather, Thonicke, Kirsten, Villa, Ferdinando, Walpole, Matt, Walz, Ariane, Walters, Michele, editor, and Scholes, Robert J., editor
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Impact of social accountability monitoring on health facility performance: Evidence from Tanzania.
- Author
-
Francetic, Igor, Fink, Günther, and Tediosi, Fabrizio
- Abstract
Social accountability programs are increasingly used to improve the performance of public service providers in low‐income settings. Despite their growing popularity, evidence on the effectiveness of social accountability programs remains mixed. In this manuscript, we assess the impact of a social accountability intervention on health facility management exploring quasiexperimental variation in program exposure in Tanzania. We find that the social accountability intervention resulted in a 1.8 SD reduction in drug stockouts relative to the control group, but did not improve facility infrastructure maintenance. The results of this study suggest that social accountability programs may be effective in areas of health service provision that are responsive to changes in provider behavior but may not work in settings where improvements in outcomes are conditional on larger health systems features. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Towards the Development of a Sensor Educational Toolkit to Support Community and Citizen Science
- Author
-
Ashley Collier-Oxandale, Vasileios Papapostolou, Brandon Feenstra, Berj Der Boghossian, and Andrea Polidori
- Subjects
air quality ,sensors ,citizen science ,community monitoring ,environmental justice ,education and outreach ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
As air quality sensors increasingly become commercially available, a deeper consideration of their usability and usefulness is needed to ensure effective application by the public. Much of the research related to sensors has focused on data quality and potential applications. While this information is important, a greater understanding of users’ experience with sensors would provide complementary information. Under a U.S. EPA-funded Science to Achieve Results grant awarded to the South Coast Air Quality Management District in California, titled “Engage, Educate, and Empower California Communities on the Use and Applications of Low-Cost Air Monitoring Sensors”, approximately 400 air quality sensors were deployed with 14 California communities. These communities received sensors and training, and they participated in workshops. Widely varying levels of sensor installation and engagement were observed across the 14 communities. However, despite differences between communities (in terms of participation, demographics, and socioeconomic factors), many participants offered similar feedback on the barriers to sensor use and strategies leading to successful sensor use. Here, we assess sensor use and participant feedback, as well as discuss the development of an educational toolkit titled “Community in Action: A Comprehensive Toolkit on Air Quality Sensors”. This toolkit can be leveraged by future community and citizen science projects to develop networks designed to collect air quality information that can help reduce exposure to and the emissions of pollutants, leading to improved environmental and public health.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Monitoreos hídricos comunitarios: conocimientos locales como defensa territorial y ambiental en Argentina, Perú y Colombia.
- Author
-
Ulloa, Astrid, Godfrid, Julieta, Damonte, Gerardo, Quiroga, Catalina, and López, Ana Paula
- Subjects
- *
MINE water , *WATER supply , *WATER quality , *LOCAL knowledge , *INFORMATION asymmetry - Abstract
The expansion of large-scale mining projects in Latin America has led to the application of several different institutional and business-endorsed water monitoring systems. These have attempted to deal with their vast environmental consequences. The methods are based on the devaluation of other forms of knowledge. As a response to this tendency, community hydric monitoring (MHC in Spanish) has been proposed in order to empower community-based knowledge. Alternative forms of knowledge are seen as useful ways of illuminating the impact of mining on water supplies. Likewise, communities have been active in developing connections with Academia, NGO's and social organizations to promote a meaningful dialogue with conventional technical paradigms. These exchanges aim to generate counter-narratives about water quality, as well as to develop a defense strategy against mining. Here we focus on the research done between 2018 and 2020 in Argentina (Veladero), Peru (Antapaccay-Expansión Tintaya) and Colombia (Cerrejón). In all these cases, the local population has developed its own MHC, based on local knowledge about water. We analyze the information asymmetries resulting from socio-environmental inequality and we advocate for a wider discussion which incorporates community-generated knowledge, and more diverse and comprehensive approaches to understanding, knowing and relating to water and to local conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. HOJA DE RUTA METODOLÓGICA PARA EL DESARROLLO DE MONITOREO COMUNARIO DE MICROCUENCAS. CASO DE ESTUDIO: RÍO FRÍO.
- Author
-
Yusara Contreras Gómez, Alix Estela and Rueda, Hanz Muller
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Metodologías participativas en la elaboración de estrategias de monitoreo comunitario de cantidad de agua para su gestión. Estudio de caso: Acueducto Comunitario Asoporquera, vereda Mochuelo Alto, Bogotá, DC.
- Author
-
Diego Escobar-Mejía, Juan and Alicia Hernández-Gómez, Carmen
- Subjects
WATER management ,APPROPRIATE technology ,SOCIAL services ,SOCIAL clubs ,AQUEDUCTS ,ZONING ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Copyright of Gestión y Ambiente is the property of Universidad Nacional de Colombia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Citizen monitoring in environmental disclosure: An economics perspective.
- Author
-
Stromberg PM and Bali Swain R
- Subjects
- Knowledge, Environmental Monitoring, Environmental Policy, Disclosure
- Abstract
Criticism is mounting that market-led and state-led initiatives for environmental impact disclosure are too limited in scope and that they rest on too strong assumptions about the quality and impartiality of monitoring and enforcement, with resulting insufficient effect on environmental sustainability. It has been proposed that citizen monitoring may contribute to counteract this void. However, to our knowledge, policy analysis in general and economics in particular has not paid much attention to this role of citizen monitoring. This paper aims to bridge that gap from an economics lens, by exploring the dynamics of disclosing local environmental impact and the potential role of citizen monitoring in environmental policy. To this end, the paper addresses monopolistic versus pluralistic environmental disclosure, letting citizen monitoring represent the latter. The study uses the mining industry as an illustrative case, because of that sector's particular transparency challenges in international value chains, typically with strong negative local environmental impact. It is shown how pluralistic information provision such as citizen monitoring can contribute to incentivizing more reliable information provision, especially in countries with weak state institutions, which is particularly important in the case of high-risk environmental impact. The findings should be of use for shaping environmental policy, providing valuable insights for both policymakers and scholars., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Can community action improve equity for maternal health and how does it do so? Research findings from Gujarat, India
- Author
-
Asha S. George, Diwakar Mohan, Jaya Gupta, Amnesty E. LeFevre, Subhasri Balakrishnan, Rajani Ved, and Renu Khanna
- Subjects
Care-seeking ,Maternity care ,Equity ,Accountability ,Community monitoring ,Report cards ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Efforts to work with civil society to strengthen community participation and action for health are particularly important in Gujarat, India, given that the state has resources and capacity, but faces challenges in ensuring that services reach those most in need. To contribute to the knowledge base on accountability and maternal health, this study examines the equity effects of community action for maternal health led by Non-Government Organizations (NGOs) on facility deliveries. It then examines the underlying implementation processes with implications for strengthening accountability of maternity care across three districts of Gujarat, India. Community action for maternal health entailed NGOs a) working with community collectives to raise awareness about maternal health entitlements, b) supporting community monitoring of outreach government services, and c) facilitating dialogue with government providers and authorities with report cards based on community monitoring of maternal health. Methods The study combined qualitative data (project documents and 56 stakeholder interviews thematically analyzed) with quantitative data (2395 women's self-reported receipt of information on entitlements and use of services over 3 years of implementation monitored prospectively through household visits). Multivariable logistic regression examined delivery care seeking and equity. Results In the marginalised districts, women reported substantial increases in receipt of information of entitlements and utilization of antenatal and delivery care. In the marginalized and wealthier districts, a switch from private facilities to public ones was observed for the most vulnerable. Supportive implementation factors included a) alignment among NGO organizational missions, b) participatory development of project tools, c) repeated capacity building and d) government interest in improving utilization and recognition of NGO contributions. Initial challenges included a) confidence and turnover of volunteers, b) complexity of the monitoring tool and c) scepticism from both communities and providers. Conclusion With capacity and trust building, NGOs supporting community based collectives to monitor health services and engage with health providers and local authorities, over time overcame implementation challenges to strengthen public sector services. These accountability efforts resulted in improvements in utilisation of public sector services and a shift away from private care seeking, particularly for the marginalised.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Community volunteer assessment of recreational water quality in the Hutt River, Wellington.
- Author
-
Valois, Amanda E., Milne, Juliet R., Heath, Mark W., Davies-Colley, Rob J., Martin, Emily, and Stott, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
WATER quality , *VOLUNTEERS , *WATER management , *RIVERS , *WATER supply - Abstract
Water is an important component of many recreational opportunities and New Zealand invests significant resources in recreational water quality (RWQ) monitoring to assess risks to public health. However, monitoring primarily focuses on microbiological hazards and RWQ is considerably broader than this. The goal of this study was to take a comprehensive approach to evaluating RWQ while exploring the potential for greater public involvement in monitoring. A popular river swimming site was co-monitored weekly by volunteers and a council field officer. The attributes monitored–water temperature, visual clarity, benthic cyanobacteria and filamentous periphyton cover, E. coli and rubbish–were identified from a volunteer workshop. There was good concordance between volunteer and council data suggesting that volunteer measurements can be considered reliable. This highlights the potential for volunteers, with professional support, including training and quality assurance, to extend council RWQ surveillance to additional monitoring sites while improving public engagement on water management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Synergizing community-based forest monitoring with remote sensing: a path to an effective REDD+ MRV system
- Author
-
M. S. R. Murthy, Hammad Gilani, Bhaskar Singh Karky, Eklabya Sharma, Marieke Sandker, Upama Ashish Koju, Shiva Khanal, and Mohan Poudel
- Subjects
Satellite images ,Community monitoring ,REDD+ MRV ,Biomass map ,Nepal ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Abstract Background The reliable monitoring, reporting and verification (MRV) of carbon emissions and removals from the forest sector is an important part of the efforts on reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD+). Forest-dependent local communities are engaged to contribute to MRV through community-based monitoring systems. The efficiency of such monitoring systems could be improved through the rational integration of the studies at permanent plots with the geospatial technologies. This article presents a case study of integrating community-based measurements at permanent plots at the foothills of central Nepal and biomass maps that were developed using GeoEye-1 and IKONS satellite images. Results The use of very-high-resolution satellite-based tree cover parameters, including crown projected area (CPA), crown density and crown size classes improves salience, reliability and legitimacy of the community-based survey of 0.04% intensity at the lower cost than increasing intensity of the community-based survey to 0.14% level (2.5 USD/ha vs. 7.5 USD/ha). Conclusion The proposed REDD+ MRV complementary system is the first of its kind and demonstrates the enhancement of information content, accuracy of reporting and reduction in cost. It also allows assessment of the efficacy of community-based forest management and extension to national scale.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Ground Water Management—Sustainability and Methodology
- Author
-
Anand, Vishwajit, Kumar, Sumit, Singh, Vijay P., Editor-in-chief, Sarma, Arup K., editor, Kartha, Suresh A., editor, and Bhattacharjya, Rajib K., editor
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Community Rescue: Saving sites from the sea
- Author
-
Tom Dawson
- Subjects
SCAPE ,Coastal Heritage ,Community Monitoring ,Archaeology ,Auxiliary sciences of history ,CC1-960 - Abstract
Erosion threatens coastal sites around the globe and Scotland has been pioneering a methodology of community action that brings local groups and professional together to work at sites before they are destroyed. This builds upon the Historic Scotland rapid coastal surveys and the follow-up analysis of collected data to prioritise action. Projects such as Shorewatch and the Scotland’s Coastal Heritage at Risk Project (SCHARP) have seen communities update records and participate in practical work. This paper presents the background to these community initiatives, giving details of two projects; the excavation of an Iron Age Wheelhouse in the Hebrides and the relocation of Bronze Age structures in Shetland.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Developing a Low-Cost Passive Method for Long-Term Average Levels of Light-Absorbing Carbon Air Pollution in Polluted Indoor Environments
- Author
-
Lara P. Clark, V. Sreekanth, Bujin Bekbulat, Michael Baum, Songlin Yang, Pao Baylon, Timothy R. Gould, Timothy V. Larson, Edmund Y. W. Seto, Chris D. Space, and Julian D. Marshall
- Subjects
household air pollution ,indoor air quality ,low-cost measurements ,time-integrated average ,exposure assessment ,community monitoring ,Chemical technology ,TP1-1185 - Abstract
We propose a low-cost passive method for monitoring long-term average levels of light-absorbing carbon air pollution in polluted indoor environments. Building on prior work, the method here estimates the change in reflectance of a passively exposed surface through analysis of digital images. To determine reproducibility and limits of detection, we tested low-cost passive samplers with exposure to kerosene smoke in the laboratory and to environmental pollution in 20 indoor locations. Preliminary results suggest robust reproducibility (r = 0.99) and limits of detection appropriate for longer-term (~1–3 months) monitoring in households that use solid fuels. The results here suggest high precision; further testing involving “gold standard” measurements is needed to investigate accuracy.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Process evaluation of community monitoring under national health mission at Chandigarh, union territory: Methodology and challenges
- Author
-
Jaya Prasad Tripathy, Arun Kumar Aggarwal, Binod Kumar Patro, and Himbala Verma
- Subjects
Chandigarh ,community monitoring ,process evaluation ,Medicine - Abstract
Background: Community monitoring was introduced on a pilot mode in 36 selected districts of India in a phased manner. In Chandigarh, it was introduced in the year 2009-2010. A preliminary evaluation of the program was undertaken with special emphasis on the inputs and the processes. Methodology: Quantitative methods included verification against checklists and record reviews. Nonparticipant observation was used to evaluate the conduct of trainings, interviews, and group discussions. Health system had trained health system functionaries (nursing students and Village Health Sanitation Committee [VHSC] members) to generate village-based scorecards for assessing community needs. Community needs were assessed independently for two villages under the study area to validate the scores generated by the health system. Results: VHSCs were formed in all 22 villages but without a chairperson or convener. The involvement of VHSC members in the community monitoring process was minimal. The conduct of group discussions was below par due to poor moderation and unequal responses from the group. The community monitoring committees at the state level had limited representation from the non-health sector, lower committees, and the nongovernmental organizations/civil societies. Agreement between the report cards generated by the investigator and the health system in the selected villages was found to be to be fair (0.369) whereas weighted kappa (0.504) was moderate. Conclusion: In spite of all these limitations and challenges, the government has taken a valiant step by trying to involve the community in the monitoring of health services. The dynamic nature of the community warrants incorporation of an evaluation framework into the planning of such programs.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Machine learning to support citizen science in urban environmental management.
- Author
-
Yang EJ, Fulton J, Swarnaraja S, and Carson C
- Abstract
Machine learning (ML) and citizen science (CS) are increasingly prevalent and rapidly evolving approaches to studying and managing environmental challenges. Municipal and other governance actors can benefit from technology advances in ML and public engagement benefits of CS but must also address validity and other quality assurance concerns in their application to particular management contexts. In this article, we take up the pervasive challenge of urban litter to demonstrate how ML can support CS by providing quality assurance in the regulatory context of California's stormwater program. We gave quantitative CS-collected data to five ML models to compare their predictions of a qualitative, site-specific, multiclass "Litter Index" score, an important regulatory metric typically only assessed by trained experts. XGBoost had the best outcome, with scores of 0.98 for accuracy, precision, recall and F-1. These strong results show that ML can provide a reliable complement to CS assessments and increase quality assurance in a regulatory context. To date, ML and CS have each contributed to litter management in novel ways and we find that their integration can provide important synergies with additional applications in other environmental management domains., Competing Interests: The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Julian Fulton reports financial support was provided by 10.13039/100000139U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, United States., (© 2023 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. AVITURISMO EN LA REGIÓN DE LAS ALTAS MONTAÑAS DE VERACRUZ, MÉXICO.
- Author
-
Pérez-Sato, J. A., Alcántara-Salinas, G., García-García, C. G., Rivera-Hernández, J. E., Salazar-Ortiz, J., M., Campos-Cerón, Román-Hernández, D., Balderas-San Miguel, O., and Fuentes-Moreno, A.
- Abstract
Copyright of Agro Productividad is the property of Colegio de Postgraduados and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. EL MONITOREO COMUNITARIO DE AVES EN LA REGIÓN DE LAS ALTAS MONTAÑAS DE VERACRUZ, MÉXICO: HACIA UN AVITURISMO COMUNITARIO.
- Author
-
Alcántara-Salinas, G., Rivera-Hernández, J. E., Calderón-Parra, J. R., Santos-Martínez, M. L., Pérez-Sato, J. A., Román-Hernández, D., Balderas-San Miguel, O., Vargas-Rueda, A. F., and Salazar-Ortiz, J.
- Abstract
Copyright of Agro Productividad is the property of Colegio de Postgraduados and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
44. A Systematic Review of Part C Early Identification Studies.
- Author
-
Barger, Brian, Rice, Catherine, Simmons, Christina Anne, and Wolf, Rebecca
- Subjects
- *
ERIC (Information retrieval system) , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *SPECIAL education , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *EARLY intervention (Education) , *DATA analysis software , *MEDICAL coding , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Authors conducted a systematic literature review on early identification steps leading at-risk young children to connect with Part C services. Authors classified data collection settings as primary (settings for general population) or specialized (settings for children at risk of developmental delay) and according to the phases of early identification in the study: (a) original population of children aged 0 to 6 years who had received Part C services, (b) screening and/or referral and/or developmental assessment from 0 through age 2 years, and (c) were deemed eligible and/or received Part C services. Authors identified 43 articles including at least two phases of the early identification process. The literature about connecting children to Part C early intervention (EI) is sparse and fragmented; few studies document the full process from community monitoring to service receipt. Results indicate opportunities for development of systems to better track and improve the identification of young children in need of EI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Synergizing community-based forest monitoring with remote sensing: a path to an effective REDD+ MRV system.
- Author
-
Murthy, M., Gilani, Hammad, Karky, Bhaskar, Sharma, Eklabya, Sandker, Marieke, Koju, Upama, Khanal, Shiva, and Poudel, Mohan
- Subjects
- *
FOREST monitoring , *CARBON dioxide mitigation , *DEFORESTATION , *FOREST degradation , *GEOGRAPHIC information systems , *FOREST biomass - Abstract
Background: The reliable monitoring, reporting and verification (MRV) of carbon emissions and removals from the forest sector is an important part of the efforts on reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD+). Forest-dependent local communities are engaged to contribute to MRV through community-based monitoring systems. The efficiency of such monitoring systems could be improved through the rational integration of the studies at permanent plots with the geospatial technologies. This article presents a case study of integrating community-based measurements at permanent plots at the foothills of central Nepal and biomass maps that were developed using GeoEye-1 and IKONS satellite images. Results: The use of very-high-resolution satellite-based tree cover parameters, including crown projected area (CPA), crown density and crown size classes improves salience, reliability and legitimacy of the community-based survey of 0.04% intensity at the lower cost than increasing intensity of the community-based survey to 0.14% level (2.5 USD/ha vs. 7.5 USD/ha). Conclusion: The proposed REDD+ MRV complementary system is the first of its kind and demonstrates the enhancement of information content, accuracy of reporting and reduction in cost. It also allows assessment of the efficacy of community-based forest management and extension to national scale. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Community monitoring interventions to curb corruption and increase access and quality in service delivery: a systematic review.
- Author
-
Molina, Ezequiel, Carella, Laura, Pacheco, Ana, Cruces, Guillermo, and Gasparini, Leonardo
- Subjects
QUALITY of service ,SERVICE industries ,MIDDLE-income countries ,COMMUNITIES ,META-analysis ,CORRUPTION - Abstract
There is a belief that allowing communities monitoring power over providers could be beneficial for improving service delivery and reducing corruption in service delivery. In community monitoring interventions (CMIs), the community is given the opportunity to observe and assess providers’ performance and provide feedback to providers and politicians. This systematic review and meta-analysis appraises and synthesises evidence on the effects of CMIs on access and quality of service delivery and corruption outcomes in low and middle-income countries. The results indicate evidence of beneficial effects of CMIs on service delivery quality and on helping to curb corruption. The potential benefits of CMIs on access to and quality of services are likely to be higher when interventions are designed so that contact between both actors are promoted, and tools for citizens to monitor agents’ performance are provided. However, more rigorous research is needed to address this hypothesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. A força comunitária indígena: reflexões com os Xakriabá no Brasil em tempos de Covid-19
- Author
-
Andrade, Rebeca Cássia, Gomes, Ana Maria R., and Barbosa De Campos, Marden
- Subjects
Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 ,French literature - Italian literature - Spanish literature - Portuguese literature ,pandemic ,community monitoring ,xakriabá ,health ,PQ1-3999 ,indigenous peoples - Abstract
O artigo apresenta um quadro sobre o primeiro ano de pandemia no cenário brasileiro em interlocução e atuação junto aos povos indígenas. A constante desconstrução de políticas públicas e as reiteradas agressões às minorias no país são agravadas pelos deslocamentos provocados pela disseminação da Covid19. Diante deste difícil contexto, apresentamos uma reflexão sobre nossa experiência com o povo indígena Xakriabá. Procuramos contribuir para a compreensão dos processos aos quais estamos todos submetidos para buscar alianças capazes de oferecer alternativas e direções de ação frente a tal quadro., Confluenze. Rivista di Studi Iberoamericani, Vol. 13 No. 1 (2021): A divided Brazil. The effects of Bolsonaro's election and government
- Published
- 2021
48. Participatory Methodologies in the Elaboration of Water Guantity Communitarian Monitoring Strategies for its Management. Case study: Asoporquera Community Aqueduct, Mochuelo Alto Village, Bogotá, DC
- Author
-
Escobar-Mejía, Juan Diego, Hernández-Gómez, Carmen Alicia, Escobar-Mejía, Juan Diego, and Hernández-Gómez, Carmen Alicia
- Abstract
This article describes, based on the progress of the research project "Community monitoring strategies for water quantity to strengthen community management. Case study: Community Aqueduct Asoporquera I Mochuelo Alto, Bogotá D.C." the adaptations made to the “User Research Framework” methodology proposed by the MIT D-lab, complemented by contributions from Medialab Prado and other experiences of active and participatory methodologies, in order to apply it to a specific territory having as principles the dialogue of knowledge between scientific-technological knowledge with other knowledge systems, their social appropriation and work between members of the community, the academy and social organizations. Methodological adaptation that allowed building a technological instrument that sought to strengthen community water management, the social tissue and permanence in the territory. Reflection on this experience shows the strengths of applying participatory methodologies in the framework of the dialogue of knowledge in co / design and co / creation processes. As well as the primary role of appropriate Science and Technology (S&T), in strengthening communities and the importance of community monitoring to know the territory and generate information that allows it to be organized around water., Este artículo describe, a partir del avance en el proyecto de investigación “Estrategias de monitoreo comunitario de cantidad de agua para fortalecer la gestión comunitaria. Estudio de caso: Acueducto Comunitario Asoporquera I Mochuelo Alto, Bogotá D.C.”, las adaptaciones realizadas a la metodología "Marco de investigación de Usuario" propuesto por el D-lab del MIT, complementada con aportes de Medialab Prado y otras experiencias de metodologías activas y participativas, con el fin de aplicarla a un territorio específico, teniendo como principios el diálogo de saberes entre el conocimiento científico-tecnológico con otros sistemas de conocimiento, su apropiación social y el trabajo entre miembros de la comunidad, la academia y organizaciones sociales. Esta adaptación metodológica permitió construir un instrumento tecnológico con miras a fortalecer la gestión comunitaria del agua, el tejido social y la permanencia en el territorio. La reflexión en torno a esta experiencia da cuenta de las fortalezas de aplicar metodologías participativas en el marco del diálogo de saberes en procesos de co/diseño y co/creación, así como del primordial papel de la Ciencia y Tecnología (CyT) apropiada en el fortalecimiento de comunidades y la importancia del monitoreo comunitario para conocer el territorio y generar información que permita ordenarlo alrededor del agua.
- Published
- 2022
49. Options for a National Framework for Benefit Distribution and Their Relation to Community-Based and National REDD+ Monitoring
- Author
-
Margaret Skutsch, Esther Turnhout, Marjanneke J. Vijge, Martin Herold, Tjeerd Wits, Jan Willem den Besten, and Arturo Balderas Torres
- Subjects
benefit sharing ,input-based distribution ,output based distribution ,equity ,community monitoring ,link to national MRV ,Plant ecology ,QK900-989 - Abstract
Monitoring is a central element in the implementation of national REDD+ and may be essential in providing the data needed to support benefit distribution. We discuss the options for benefit sharing systems in terms of technical feasibility and political acceptability in respect of equity considerations, and the kind of data that would be needed for the different options. We contrast output-based distribution systems, in which rewards are distributed according to performance measured in terms of carbon impacts, with input-based systems in which performance is measured in term of compliance with prescribed REDD+ activities. Output-based systems, which would require regular community carbon inventories to produce Tier 3 data locally, face various challenges particularly for the case of assessing avoided deforestation, and they may not be perceived as equitable. Input-based systems would require data on activities undertaken rather than change in stocks; this information could come from community-acquired data. We also consider how community monitored data could support national forest monitoring systems and the further development of national REDD+.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Participating in REDD+ Measurement, Reporting, and Verification (PMRV): Opportunities for Local People?
- Author
-
Manuel Boissière, Guillaume Beaudoin, Carola Hofstee, and Serge Rafanoharana
- Subjects
community monitoring ,MRV ,methods ,forest degradation ,deforestation ,carbon ,REDD+ ,Indonesia ,Plant ecology ,QK900-989 - Abstract
Assessing forest changes is the baseline requirement for successful forest management. Measurement, Reporting, and Verification (MRV) are three essential components for achieving such assessments. Community participation in resource monitoring and management is increasingly seen as a scientifically efficient, cost-effective, and equitable way to employ such practices, particularly in the context of REDD+. We developed a multidisciplinary approach to study the feasibility of Participatory MRV (PMRV) across three sites along a forest degradation gradient in Indonesia. We looked at both the local and national level needs of MRV. Our approach combines: (1) social research focusing on the enabling conditions for local participation in MRV; (2) governance analyses of existing MRV systems in forestry and health; and (3) remote sensing work comparing overlaps and gaps between satellite imagery and local assessments of forest changes. We considered in our approach the possible multiple benefits of PMRV (carbon mitigation, biodiversity conservation, livelihood security). Our study helped to identify the multiple stakeholders (communities, NGOs and governments) and what the levels of governance should be to make PMRV design and implementation feasible and sustainable.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.