73
by the finding upon further analysis that when only the corresponding authors were resident to
the country, there was low implementation of findings (although the sample size was small).
To add to this, although author capacity was not significant as a single variable in developing
countries, there were significantly higher levels of uptake when the corresponding author was
affiliated to an international NGO. Similarly, the lack of importance of local governments in
implementation of findings, a decrease in importance of local NGO funding, and an increase
in that of international NGO funding in multivariate analysis (table 10) lends further support to
this. It is likely that in developing countries the issue of low local capacity outweighs the
importance of author characteristics.
The best combination with regards to implementation in developing countries appears to be
when the corresponding authors are international and co-authors resident, suggesting a need
for capacity building in these areas in order to increase local researcher involvement (Foster,
1993; Durant et al, 2007) and enable them to attract international funding. Capacity building
could therefore be an important role for international scientific researchers, and there was
some evidence of this seen from the survey responses. A study by Frid (2001) led to the
conversion of one former poacher involved in the research to a park warden, and an important
part of the research by Seddon et al (2003) on the Arabian oryx was to train local co-workers
and develop their ability to conduct and publish independent research (survey response).
The above discussion would suggest that there are different factors driving implementation in
developing countries, such as lower capacity and political climate, not controlled for in this
study. There was also support for the hypothesis that there is an added value for long term
research in developing countries to build trust and networks (Bergerhoff Mulder et al, 2007;
Durant et al, 2007; Meijaard & Shiel, 2007). It appears that NGOs, in particular international
NGOs, drive the implementation of findings in developing countries.
Dostları ilə paylaş: