Introduction
As global environmental pressures grow in number, extent and impact (Jones et al., Reference Jones, Venter, Fuller, Allan, Maxwell, Negret and Watson2018; Geldmann et al., Reference Geldmann, Manica, Burgess, Coad and Balmford2019; IPBES, Reference Brondizio, Settele, Díaz and Ngo2019) the need for delivering relevant and sustainable capacity building in conservation has never been greater (Korn et al., Reference Korn, Schliep and Epple2004; Schmeller et al., Reference Schmeller, Arvanitidis, Böhm, Brummitt, Chatzinikolaou and Costello2017a,Reference Schmeller, Böhm, Arvanitidis, Barber-Meyer, Brummitt and Chandlerb). Individuals, organizations and communities need the skills, knowledge and information that allow them to address environmental issues at a variety of spatial scales, within diverse contexts and with varying levels of resources (Gillespie, Reference Gillespie2009; O'Connell et al., Reference O'Connell, Nasirwa, Carter, Farmer, Appleton and Arinaitwe2017). This capacity is currently built through a range of activities, including tertiary education, training courses, online learning, mentoring and continuing professional development. However, a significant proportion of the current capacity-building provision is largely non-strategic, project-based and reactive (i.e. occurs as a result of organizations addressing their immediate capacity needs or individuals wishing to develop their personal competences). This has led to considerable duplication of capacity-building effort within and between organizations and ineffective mobilization and use of capacity-building funds and resources (Schmeller et al., Reference Schmeller, Böhm, Arvanitidis, Barber-Meyer, Brummitt and Chandler2017b). As a sector we still lack a coordinated approach to capacity building at the national or international level (i.e. an agreed list of capacity-building outcomes that are strategically linked to broader conservation goals at various spatial and temporal scales). In particular, assessments of future global capacity needs, and hence capacity-building needs, are missing. Without such assessments, the delivery of capacity building in conservation will remain fundamentally ad hoc and we will continue to be uncertain regarding what capacity is needed to meet the coming environmental challenges, where it should be delivered (geographically and in terms of professional levels) and how to best deliver it (i.e. cost-effective, sustainable, quantifiable and culturally appropriate methods).
In one part of the conservation sector (protected area management) there has been investment in developing an international strategic framework for capacity-building efforts. In 2015, the IUCN and the World Commission on Protected Areas produced a Strategic Framework for Capacity Development (Coad et al., Reference Coad, Leverington, Knights, Geldmann, Eassom and Kapos2015). Their 10-year objective was: ‘Long-term and sustainable protected area capacity development opportunities, programmes and products to provide a foundation that will assist more effective, efficient, just, and equitable management of all types of protected areas, enhancing the ability of countries to meet their commitments under the Convention on Biological Diversity's Programme of Work for Protected Areas … and the Aichi Targets’ (IUCN, 2015, p. 1). However, despite the implementation of this framework, at a national level the World Commission on Protected Areas has recognized that few sustained capacity-building programmes currently exist and where such within-country investment has occurred ‘converting investment in capacity to improved performance of protected areas has been limited’ (IUCN, 2015, p. 4).
Future national-level capacity-building strategies will also need to consider the wide range of issues regarding the delivery of capacity building. For example, current provision is largely focused on short-term training (Virji et al., Reference Virji, Padgham and Seipt2012). There is a need to move towards additional tools such as workplace learning and mentoring, e-learning, peer-to-peer exchanges and servicing communities of practice (Wells et al., Reference Wells, Ryan, Campa and Smith2005; Virji et al., Reference Virji, Padgham and Seipt2012; Ivey et al., Reference Ivey, Geber and Nänni2013; O'Connell et al., Reference O'Connell, Nasirwa, Carter, Farmer, Appleton and Arinaitwe2017). This is vital because it is known that short-term or project-focused capacity building often results in the temporal decay or haemorrhaging of skills and knowledge (Arthur et al., Reference Arthur, r, Bennett, r, Stanush and McNelly1998; Cheng & Hampson, Reference Cheng and Hampson2008). Some delivery mechanisms also do not account for audience diversity in terms of language barriers and the cultural aspects of both learning and teaching (Korn et al., Reference Korn, Schliep and Epple2004; Trewhella et al., Reference Trewhella, Rodriguez-Clark, Corp, Entwistle, Garrett and Granek2005; Derlink et al., Reference Derlink, Wernham, Bertoncelj, Kovács, Saurola and Duke2018). Capacity building is often not focused on building institutionalized frameworks (i.e. the elimination of dependence on the outside delivery of capacity). This needs to be replaced by internal, continuous and strategic capacity-building opportunities that are linked to individual, organizational and regional conservation strategies and goals rather than specific one-off projects. Partnership approaches will be key to supporting this type of delivery (Wescott, Reference Wescott2002; O'Connell et al., Reference O'Connell, Nasirwa, Carter, Farmer, Appleton and Arinaitwe2017). Delivery methods mediated through higher-educational systems (capacity delivery through modular packages of knowledge) often struggle to bridge the gap between underpinning academic knowledge (e.g. ecology) and the skills and competences required in conservation practice (Hogg et al., Reference Hogg, Grueber, Pemberton, Fox, Lee, Ivy and Belov2017; Bertuol-Garcia et al., Reference Bertuol-Garcia, Morsello, El-Hani and Pardini2018; Fabian et al., Reference Fabian, Bollmann, Brang, Heiri, Olschewski and Rigling2019). Furthermore, higher-education systems are often difficult to alter once they are in place and therefore are not always responsive to changing conservation needs and regional goals (Müller et al., Reference Müller, Appleton, Ricci, Valverde, Reynolds, Worboys, Lockwood, Kothari, Feary and Pulsford2015).
Adaptive and responsive capacity-building frameworks within and between organizations also require adequate monitoring and evaluation systems to be developed and implemented. Current capacity provision is largely non-adaptive (i.e. it is unable to respond quickly to internal or external change because it cannot monitor and evaluate short- and long-term conservation impacts; Horton, Reference Horton2002).
Given the growing number, diversity and extent of environmental problems worldwide, the conservation sector will also need to scale up current levels of capacity-building provision to address these challenges (Schmeller et al., Reference Schmeller, Arvanitidis, Böhm, Brummitt, Chatzinikolaou and Costello2017a,Reference Schmeller, Böhm, Arvanitidis, Barber-Meyer, Brummitt and Chandlerb). Importantly, this scaling up is not only about providing greater numbers of capacity-building activities of greater diversity but is also concerned with geographical relevance. This is because access to and provision of conservation capacity building are currently spatially patchy (i.e. they are biased towards city hubs and away from rural or isolated areas; Müller et al., Reference Müller, Appleton, Ricci, Valverde, Reynolds, Worboys, Lockwood, Kothari, Feary and Pulsford2015).
If a strategic and coordinated national-level conservation capacity-building framework is to be developed, a matching exercise will be necessary to evaluate how well current capacity-building provision can meet future capacity needs, particularly in relation to ensuring this translates into the improved meeting of conservation goals. Figure 1 provides an overview of the four key stages of information gathering required to provide the raw materials for future national and global assessments. The key actions are: Stage 1, identify future capacity needs in the context of conservation goals and future environmental threats; Stage 2, identify future capacity-building needs arising from the Stage 1 assessment; Stage 3, assess current capacity-building provision. These stages provide the means to identify specific capacity-building gaps that will need to be addressed (Stage 4).
In 2019, the University of Gloucestershire, UK, funded a 4-month postgraduate project as part of the institutional Global Challenge Research Fund. The project was designed to investigate potential methods and issues associated with undertaking a Stage 3 assessment (i.e. assessment of current levels of national capacity-building provision). Stages 1 and 2 will require the development of large-scale, well-resourced and multi-agency initiatives. However, a Stage 3 assessment provides high-utility information in the absence of the other stages. The broad project aim was to develop a method for collating, quantifying and characterizing current national-level capacity-building provision using online material. We were also interested in addressing two process-focused questions: (1) Are the requisite data and information on capacity-building provision readily available? (2) How much time and effort are required to collate such information?
Methods
As there is an urgent need for strategic conservation capacity building in sub-Saharan Africa (O'Connell et al., Reference O'Connell, Nasirwa, Carter, Farmer, Appleton and Arinaitwe2017), we chose this region as the central focus for the online searches in relation to the provision of capacity building. Initial exploratory surveys of online data availability suggested that Kenya had the greatest number of capacity-related courses and events for which relevant information was readily available online. To develop a method that is replicable for other countries and to simplify the data-gathering process, we used the Google search engine (Google, Mountain View, USA) to obtain information on 177 capacity-building initiatives active in the 6-year period 2014–2019. We only searched for initiatives with an online presence (i.e. it was beyond our scope to assess the internal capacity-building activities of organizations). Furthermore, because of practical constraints we had no direct contact with organizations to check the details of the initiatives recorded. The online resources comprised NGO webpages, archived projects, project reports, newsletters, and university webpages and course brochures. The searches focused on identifying the capacity-building themes, delivery methods and geographical region of each initiative. The final database comprised 111 continuous and categorical variables (Supplementary Table 1). Not all of the capacity initiatives investigated contained information for all 111 variables and so sample sizes for the analyses varied. We assessed collation effort by recording the time taken to find, code and enter relevant information into a database. We interrogated this collated database to provide a characterization of current conservation capacity-building provision in Kenya. Many analyses are possible using this dataset but here we present findings in four broad areas of particular value to developing future capacity-building strategies: (1) the thematic focus of available capacity-building initiatives, (2) the methods of delivery employed, (3) the types of organizations providing capacity building, and (4) the characteristics of the participants involved.
Results
Collation effort
It took a mean of 25 minutes to search for and collate information on a single capacity-building initiative and to enter its details into the database (range 3–120 minutes). Thus, for a national assessment of capacity provision described on 200 websites we estimate that it would take a total of c. 12 working days to complete data searching and entry. We experienced three additional collation issues: (1) It was essential to produce clear definitions and separations of the categories and subcategories used within the data collation exercise. (2) The information provided within many websites was inconsistent and most initiatives were missing data for one or more of the collation variables. Importantly, most initiative websites did not publish post-delivery information (e.g. the characteristics of the attendees, such as age, gender, job title, reason for attending). This information was probably collected by organizations but it was rare to find these data published on their websites. (3) A number of websites had broken links and this limited access. Some also had conflicting information across their pages (e.g. in terms of dates, locations and training content).
Thematic focus
Of the 177 capacity-building initiatives investigated, 130 (73%) were delivered by academic institutions and 47 (27%) were delivered by non-academic organizations (i.e. where academic tertiary education or research was not the primary goal). For these two groups we assessed the focus of the initiative provision within three broad thematic types: conservation knowledge, technical skills and soft skills (Fig. 2).
There was a greater focus on knowledge-based provision and less emphasis on the provision of soft skills within the university sector. However, for the latter theme there were more university-based initiatives that included project design and management, communication and negotiation, and entrepreneurship. For non-academic organizations provision was generally evenly dispersed across the three themes. Figure 3 shows the range of subjects covered by academic courses at the tertiary level. Of the 128 courses reviewed, 42% were focused on conservation, wildlife or environmental management, with 47% focused on the broader and more traditional natural science subjects of biology, botany, ecology and zoology.
Types of initiative providers and key methods of delivery
Seventy-two per cent of the initiatives recorded were delivered through academic institutions. Of those delivered by non-academic organizations 41% were provided by international NGOs, 15% by national (Kenyan) NGOs and 10% by Kenyan government agencies (Fig. 4a). For these non-academic initiatives we recorded six types of delivery method. Of these, specialist training courses accounted for 50% of all provision, with 30% delivered as workshops and 13% delivered through internships (Fig. 4b).
The data collation process demonstrated that capacity-building initiatives were often organized by an organization other than the one acting as the direct provider (i.e. a second overseeing organization was the primary facilitator or funding body). Of these overseeing organizations 60% were based in Kenya and 23% were based outside Africa.
Types of participants
The most frequent (63%) group size for individual initiatives was ≤ 20 participants (Fig. 5). The data indicated a substantial gender bias towards male participants (69%). Only 29% of participants were from Kenya, with 67% being from other African nations and 4% from outside Africa.
Discussion
Given the growing demands of the environmental sector in relation to the skills and knowledge of conservation professionals (Appleton et al., Reference Appleton, Barborak, Daltry, Long, O'Connell, Owen and Valencia2021) there is an urgent need to ensure that future capacity-building provision is fit for purpose (Lucas et al., Reference Lucas, Gora and Alonso2017; Elliott et al., Reference Elliott, Ryan and Wyborn2018). Current ad hoc and reactive capacity-building provision will need to be replaced by more strategic national-level approaches (Margules & Pressey, Reference Margules and Pressey2000; Schmeller et al., Reference Schmeller, Böhm, Arvanitidis, Barber-Meyer, Brummitt and Chandler2017b). We believe that our study is the first attempt to characterize current conservation capacity building at a national level and is thus an important first step towards the process outlined in Fig. 1. Although the information generated by this project could be used to support the strategic development of capacity building in Kenya, perhaps its main value is its evaluation of suitable data collation methods. In particular, we demonstrated that high-utility information can be gleaned from conservation and educational websites relatively quickly. Furthermore, the collated information can be coded at the point of collection to facilitate a broad range of subsequent analyses. We assumed that any capacity-building initiative taking place in Kenya would have an online presence. Although this is a reasonable assumption, the information collated did not include capacity building that was internal to organizations (e.g. mentoring or continuing professional development for staff). Future work in this area will need to include direct conversations with organizations to quantify this element of capacity building.
There is growing evidence of the importance of soft skills in conservation (White et al., Reference White, Sutton, Salguero-Gómez, Bray, Campbell and Cieraad2015; Barlow et al., Reference Barlow, Barlow, Boddam-Whetham and Robinson2016; Elliott et al., Reference Elliott, Ryan and Wyborn2018). Our findings suggest that in Kenya capacity associated with soft skills is currently being provided by both the higher education sector and conservation NGOs. However, such skills are not specific to conservation, and training in these areas could be available widely outside the sector. Future assessments of conservation capacity building will need to assess whether these skills are delivered most effectively within a conservation context or are equally effective when delivered by non-specialist organizations.
Our findings suggest that in Kenya the higher education sector currently plays a significant role in conservation capacity building. However, future delivery in this sector will be driven largely by course viability rather than the strategic provision of subjects (i.e. where there is a commercial benefit, universities will provide traditional ecology, zoology and botany courses; Teferra, Reference Teferra2013). Students graduating from these courses are provided with a wide range of skills and knowledge, only some of which will be relevant if they wish to enter the conservation sector. Further work will be needed to develop commercially viable courses focused solely on conservation and wildlife management and to ensure that course content is developed in close association with conservation NGOs.
The results of our study also demonstrate the significant role of international NGOs in the provision of capacity-building initiatives in Kenya (43% of initiatives were organized by international NGOs). It is likely this will be similar in other sub-Saharan countries, reflecting a growth in the influence of international NGOs during the last 3 decades (Armitage et al., Reference Armitage, Mbatha, Muhl, Rice and Sowman2021). This influence covers a range of conservation elements, including setting conservation agendas, and international NGOs can provide greater levels of core funding than generally are available at a national level (Rodríguez et al., Reference Rodríguez, Taber, Daszak, Sukumar, Valladares-Padua and Padua2007; Green & Hadden, Reference Green and Hadden2021). However, from a capacity-building perspective it will be important for values and operational structures that are culturally relevant at community- and national levels to be maintained and integrated into new training and education initiatives (O'Connell et al., Reference O'Connell, Nasirwa, Carter, Farmer, Appleton and Arinaitwe2017; Johnson et al., Reference Johnson, Saypanya, Hansel and Rao2022). The data also indicated a substantial gender bias towards male participants (no other gender identity categories than male and female were available). Other studies have shown similar biases across various parts of the conservation sector (Tulloch, Reference Tulloch2020; Chaudhury & Colla, Reference Chaudhury and Colla2021; Giakoumi et al., Reference Giakoumi, Pita, Coll, Fraschetti, Gissi and Katara2021). Although this is a pervasive, cross-society and multifaceted problem that is not specific to conservation, further specific research is required to identify how it could be addressed in the context of future capacity-building strategies for conservation.
Although we attempted to characterize particular aspects of current capacity provision, it was not possible to evaluate or quantify the quality of the initiatives investigated. Previous studies have attempted to ensure lasting impacts from conservation actions by identifying a range of standards (Nygren & Jokinen, Reference Nygren and Jokinen2013; CMP, 2020), and a similar drive exists for developing standards in capacity provision and evaluation. A key standard could be in relation to the benefits derived from ensuring a collaborative approach to capacity building, as has been demonstrated in many conservation actions (Head, Reference Head2003; Fisher et al., Reference Fisher, Stutzman, Vedoveto, Delgado, Rivero and Quertehuari Dariquebe2020). Another could be stakeholder participation in the development and evaluation of course content (Reed, Reference Reed2008). This could reduce the current repetition of effort and facilitate the generation of standardized methods, resulting in improved course evaluation (Sawrey et al., Reference Sawrey, Copsey and Milner-Gulland2019). This is particularly important for comparisons between countries and regions.
All of the data within the collated database were spatially referenced and could therefore be mapped within a geographical information system (GIS). This provides the potential for introducing a spatial element to the assessment (e.g. to identify hotspots and coldspots of capacity provision). The GIS could also be used to analyse the capacity-building data in relation to socio-economic and population demography data. Such analyses would provide further insights into and greater understanding of the observed patterns of capacity provision and associated gaps. This will be key for addressing spatial disparities of provision for organizations and communities in remoter areas and for understanding the demographic and socio-economic contexts in which the provision of capacity building takes place. If future conservation capacity building is to be developed in a strategic way, a number of wider contexts will have to be addressed in addition to the national assessment described in this study: (1) A collaborative partnership should be developed to fund and extend this type of approach to other countries and regions. The initial focus could be on lower- and middle-income countries with high biodiversity and experiencing high levels of threat to biodiversity. Such partnerships should also access the lessons learnt from other sectors (Elliott et al., Reference Elliott, Ryan and Wyborn2018). (2) There is currently no clear consensus regarding which activities constitute capacity building in conservation. For example, we did not include statistics courses in the current analysis unless they specifically focused on conservation or the environment. However, statistical analysis is regularly undertaken and used in conservation and is a required competence for a number of key conservation roles. In this evaluation we tended to be inclusive (i.e. we added information to the database when in doubt) but an agreed typology needs to be developed to standardize future assessments. (3) One of the lessons we learnt during the project was that the information provided within many of the websites was inconsistent and there were many broken links. To improve the quality of the data for future capacity assessments, an improvement to the method applied in this case study would be to budget for additional time to allow for clarification through direct contact with the capacity-building provider. (4) Research is needed to evaluate how the results of an online assessment of capacity-building provision might be altered when in-house capacity-building activities (e.g. mentoring and continuing professional development) are included. (5) National assessments of this nature will need to be conducted by conservation practitioners within the country to check the quality of the information gathered using their local knowledge and understanding of the conservation landscape and constraints. A conservation practitioner from another country in the region should also be involved in the assessment, to provide feedback on the transferability of the methods to other countries within the region. (6) Spatially referencing the initiatives in terms of both delivery and organization would enable future visualization of the data within a GIS for a broad range of stakeholder audiences. Spatial analyses should also be undertaken to provide an understanding of the demographic and socio-economic contexts in which the provision of capacity building for conservation takes place.
Acknowledgements
We are grateful for the support of the University of Gloucestershire and funding from Research England, Global Challenges Research Fund, and to Shaun Griffiths, an MSc student at the University of Gloucestershire who assisted with the collation of references.
Author contributions
Project conception, securing funding: MO, KL, RB; data collation, primary analysis: AD; writing: MO, supported by AD, KL, RB.
Conflicts of interest
None.
Ethical standards
This research abided by the Oryx guidelines on ethical standards. The research did not involve human subjects, experimentation with animals and/or collection of specimens.