4.7 Article

Collective action for changing forests: A spatial, social-ecological approach to assessing participation in invasive plant management

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2021.102366

Keywords

Environmental governance; Invasive species; Bayesian modeling; Social-ecological systems; Human-environment; Institutions

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Dynamics of Coupled Natural and Human Systems Program [1211498]
  2. Environmental Resilience Institute - Indiana University's Prepared for Environmental Change grand challenge initiative
  3. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie
  4. Division Of Behavioral and Cognitive Sci [1211498] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The study focused on how community members in Chitwan, Nepal manage rapid environmental change caused by an invasive plant species (Mikania micrantha), highlighting risk perceptions, reliance on forest resources, perceptions of forest safety, and the abundance of the invasive species as the most influential factors driving collective action. The findings suggest that the impact of the invasive species on collective action varies across spatial scales, emphasizing the importance of considering social and biophysical factors across space and time to effectively address environmental change-related collective action issues.
Environmental governance research has discovered much about what drives collective action to address human environment issues, including factors such as risk perceptions and self-efficacy. Yet the design of many studies limits our ability to draw conclusions about collective action under conditions of environmental change, especially across spatial or temporal scales. In this study, we integrate social and biophysical data-assessing data over time and examining the influence of space-to analyze efforts by community members to manage rapid environmental change in the form of an invasive plant (Mikania micrantha) in community forests in Chitwan, Nepal. Invasive species are an increasingly complex ethical, cultural, and ecological issue that is becoming more pressing with global environmental and social changes. We combine household surveys, ecological surveys, and spatial data in Bayesian hierarchical linear models to explore changes in the drivers of collective action since initial household surveys in 2014. We find that risk perceptions, reliance on forest resources, perceptions of forest safety, and M. micrantha abundance were the most influential factors in our models. Additionally, our findings suggest that the influence of M. micrantha abundance on collective action varies across spatial scales, indicating important interactions between social and biophysical drivers of collective action. Ultimately, our results highlight the importance of considering social and biophysical factors across space and time to inform the design of institutions that will be effective in addressing collection action problems tied to environmental change.

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