Why should protected areas be assessed?

Protected area (PA) assessments are a step by step analysis of a PA’s management framework. They point out potential deadlocks in the management process and highlight successful management practices that should be maintained.

In fine, analysing PAs help to prioritise actions to undertake in order to improve the management of the PA in the short/mid-term, and to design appropriate solutions to overcome issues that were identified in the process.

“Assessing effectiveness” should be understood as a means to:

  1. Measure the performance of a protected area and its periphery (or a protected area system) compared to its aims. The performance of the protected area (or protected area system) concerns its results and impacts, including its classic functions of conservation, environmental education, recreation etc., but also its cultural, social or economic functions…
  2. Take decisions that are adapted and evolved in relation to this performance and ensuring the context of the protected area evolves. The context is the framework for implementing management of the protected area (or the system). This is not fixed and should evolve in relation to advances in knowledge and the evolution of the rationales for the protected area.
  3. Improve and thereby reach objectives. The objectives are those identified during the process of designating the protected area and planning etc. and depend on the means and support that the area benefits from. But beyond that, they take account of functions (social, economic and cultural development, recreation, education, etc.) which are not expressly taken into account by management.
  4. Be accountable to all partners in management of the protected area (including local). The assessment provides a measure of the benefits (or the costs) of management of the protected area and a comparison with the efforts undertaken (by management, donors, people). This measure is also the basis for identifying additional useful means.

Types of assessment tools used

Numerous actors in the world of conservation, such as WWF, TNC or the World Heritage Centre of UNESCO have developed assessment methods. They are numerous (more than forty) but have a common focus: the framework developed by the IUCN World Commission on Protected Areas (WCPA).

To find out more, download the IUCN guidelines on management effectiveness.

The choice of a specific tool depended on the scale on which the PA managers wished to work on and on the level of details they needed to go into. More than 40 different evaluation tools exist around the world. 3 of them have mainly been used within IUCN PAPACO’s work:

Assessments at the scale of one PA (parks, reserves, community based reserves, etc.):

  • Management Effectiveness Tracking Tool (METT) has been widely used as it is an quick and easily repeatable tool to be adopted by PA managers at site level
  • Enhance our Heritage Toolkit (EOH) is more detailed and onerous tool that has been used on World Heritage sites at site level.

Assessments at the scale of a network of protected areas (national, regional or transboundary):

  • Rapid Assessment and Prioritization of Protected Areas (RAPPAM) is a quick and easily repeatable assessment tool dedicated to analyze the functioning of a whole PA network at national or regional level.

Voluntary and participatory approach

This is a voluntary based approach from PA managers. Each assessment (regardless to the type of tool used) involves all stakeholders related to the protected area, and is carried out in close collaboration with managers. The approach is totally participatory. The proposed process is not subject to any constraint or condition, except making all results publicly accessible.

Recommendations from these assessments have, for example, been used by certain countries to establish their priorities for Medium Size projects of the Global Environment Facility (GEF) for implementing work programs on protected areas under the Convention on Biodiversity.