Bridging the research-practice gap: conservation research priorities in a Central and Eastern European country

Barbara Mihok,Eszter Kovacs,Balint Balazs,Gyorgy Pataki,Andras Ambrus,Denes Bartha,Zoltan Czirak,Sandor Csanyi,Peter Csepanyi, Monika Csőszi, Gyorgy Dudas, Csaba Egri,Tibor Erős, Szilvia Gőri, Gergő Halmos, Annamaria Kopek,Katalin Margoczi, Gabor Miklay, Laszlo Milon,Laszlo Podmaniczky, Janos Sarvari, Andras Schmidt, Katalin Sipos, Viktoria Siposs,Tibor Standovar, Csaba Szigetvari,Laszlo Szemethy,Balazs Toth, Laszlo Toth,Peter P Toth, K Torok,Peter Torok,Csaba Vadasz, Ildiko Varga,William J Sutherland,Andras Baldi

Journal for Nature Conservation(2015)

引用 10|浏览12
暂无评分
摘要
Halting biodiversity loss is a critical aim for the forthcoming decades, but is hindered by the gap between research and practice. Bridging this gap is a significant challenge in the countries of Central and Eastern Europe, where, compared to Western European countries, biodiversity is higher but the research budget is lower. Approaches to address bridging this gap include participatory research prioritizing exercises. These demand-driven collaborative ranking processes have proven to be a useful tool in providing a research agenda derived from a review of critical challenges based on stakeholder engagement. However, for research agendas to be effectively realized, they are best developed and implemented at the operative level of research financing and implementation. This paper shows the process and the outcome of an exercise conducted in Hungary aiming to compile the most important conservation research questions at the country-level and outlines a set of further measures and tools required for dissemination and advocacy for the research agenda. During the process 792 research questions were collated from conservation practitioners and natural resource managers based on interviews and via an online questionnaire; the final 50 most important questions were identified by practitioners and policy makers during an expert workshop. Questions are embedded in global and EU biodiversity targets and imply a pragmatic approach with the aim of identifying research that supports policy- and decision-making regarding habitat management, land-use and regional development, while also focussing on conflicting issues. The outcome of the process includes the potential for lobbying, therefore post-publication activities and dissemination strategies are outlined as an integrated part of the exercise.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Participatory research,Research priority,Conservation management,Interdisciplinarity,Dissemination strategy
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要