Adaptive learning: From isang bagsak to the all in CBNRM programme
Issue Date
1-2009
Abstract
© International Development Research Centre, 2010. Part 1: About the case study Rural communities and field researchers aiming to achieve sustainable management of the environment need to adapt to rapidly changing contexts of rural poverty and resource degradation. This capacity is called adaptive learning or, adaptive management. Adaptive learning is based on the premise that learning from their experiences empowers participants to respond more effectively to new uncertainties, enabling them to change old ways of doing things and allowing them to make better decisions in managing the natural resource base. Thus learning is a knowledge enterprise where new knowledge is generated from experiences, shared through formal and non-formal channels of communication, stored, and relearned in a creative fashion. However, this is easier said than done. How this cyclical process takes place in the context of Community-Based Natural Resource Management (CBNRM), which is a social process by nature, is something that research and development agencies, academic institutions, and learning centres should explore more deeply and document it. This will allow one to understand whether contextual factors make learning possible or not. The Adaptive Learning and Linkages in Community-Based Natural Resource Management programme (ALL in CBNRM) and its earlier phases, the Isang Bagsak programme, have tried to provide answers to this question by facilitating a regional programme in adaptive learning for CBNRM researchers and practitioners in Southeast Asia.
Source or Periodical Title
Collaborative Learning in Practice: Examples from Natural Resource Management in Asia
Page
55-94
Document Type
Book Chapter
Language
English
Recommended Citation
Cadiz, Maria Celeste & Dagli, Winifredo. (2009). Adaptive learning: From isang bagsak to the all in CBNRM programme.
Identifier
https://doi.org/10.1017/UPO9788175968639.005
Digital Copy
None