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2. Communication, education and public awareness (CEPA). Communication, education and public awareness (CEPA) are a mix of social instruments that underpin the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD); Article 13 of the CBD recognises the need for education and public awareness to secure active inv
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1. 1 Coastal and Wetland Biodiversity Management at Cox’s Bazaar and Hakaluki HaorInception Workshop 21 June 2003
Theme: Awareness
Anisuzzaman Khan, IUCNB
Chinmoy Mutsuddi, SEMP
Moniruzzaman Khan, IUCNB
2. 2 Communication, education and public awareness (CEPA) Communication, education and public awareness (CEPA) are a mix of social instruments that underpin the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD);
Article 13 of the CBD recognises the need for education and public awareness to secure active involvement of all sectors and levels of society that have a stake in biodiversity;
Education and public awareness are critically important to achieving the CBD’s agenda for social change;
CEPA plays different roles at different stages of a policy cycle. As a policy is formed, CEPA is used to draw out and balance different ideas about how to proceed;
CEPA contributes to quality control of a policy/strategy through monitoring and evaluation.
3. 3 What is Communication and Public Awareness?
Communication
Communication is a complex set of interrelated behaviors, which entails the development and sharing of symbolic meaning thus enabling the building of societies.
Public Awareness
Awareness may be defined as meaning knowledge, realizing, or consciousness. It is knowledge, realization, and consciousness that enable people to understand and reason.
4. 4 Communication Strategies Four strategies that can be distinguished are:
Informing: for instance, informing companies about a new environmental regulation
Persuasion: for instance, persuading visitors of a Nature Park to take good care of the park, to clean up litter and not to hunt or fish
Dialogue: for instance, dialogue with farmers living in a protected area about a new management plan for this area
Formation: for instance, dialogue with future inhabitants of a yet to be built suburb about the desired planning, design and facilities of this suburb
5. 5 Communication Approaches
6. 6 Communication Approaches (cont.)
7. 7 Communication planning Steps involved in communication planning
Set organisational goals
Define goals
Carry out situation analysis
Identify significant stakeholders and target groups
Define objectives for each target group
Design different approaches for different audiences: message and media strategies - organization
Prepare program evaluation method
Prepare implementation plan (assign responsibilities, do schedule & budget, design feedback and program adjustment)
Implement plan
Measure the effectiveness of communication
Evaluate results
Store and disseminate lessons learned
8. 8 Communication means and instruments Printed means
- Letters - Annual Reports
- Brochures - Reports
- Journals - Magazines
Video
Visual means
- Visitor centre
- Display / Exhibition of posterS
- Slides - Film/Video
Digital means
- Websites
- CD Roms
- News letter
9. 9 Identifying stakeholders – an example
Primary Stakeholders
Whose permission, approval or financial support do I need to reach my goal?
Ministry of Environment and Forest
Ministry of Land
Etc.
Who is directly affected by my plan or activity?
Landowners and or residents in the wetland
Agriculture and Fisherman Sector
Tourism operators
Recreational and other users (hunters, bird watchers, bikers, hikers, riders etc.)
10. 10 Identifying stakeholders Secondary Stakeholders
Who is indirectly affected by our plans?
Local business
Landowners and or residents not inside the protected area but near
Environmental NGO’s
11. 11 Identifying stakeholders Tertiary Stakeholders
Who is not involved or affected, but can influence opinions either for or against?
Local opinion leaders (mosque, business or trade union leaders, teachers, local celebrities)
Local media
Ecology departments of universities, research institutes
Environmental inserts or special programs of national media
12. 12 Target Group Analysis Which groups of people are involved?
Which groups are instrumental to solve the issue?
Can we segment these groups into homogenous groups of people we can define easily?
What problems do arise from the issue per target group?
What has been done sofar towards these target groups?
What has been their reaction?
13. 13 Target Group Analysis (cont.) What is their involvement in the issue: - objective or subjective (personal)
- high or low (interested, committed)
- risk perception (money, reputation, status)
What do they know about the issue?
What is their perception of the issue?
What is their main attitude/wish/desire with regard to the issue?
14. 14 Target Group Analysis (cont.) What is their current behaviour with regard to the the issue?
What is an obstacle for them to think or act as we would like:
- what are benefits for business as usual
- what do they perceive as costs to change their attitude, knowledge, behaviour
- what would make them change their mind
15. 15 Target Group Analysis (cont.)
Who is a credible sender for this target group?:
which newspapers, magazines they read?
who are their peers, bosses?
which places do they frequent?
to whom do they listen in general?
how credible are we ourselves in the eyes of the target group?
16. 16 Target Group Analysis (cont.) What else do we know about the target group?:
name & adress data
demographical data
psychographical data
lifestyle data
attitudinal data
cognitive data
17. 17 THE END
THANK YOU