community engagement
Ord aims for a community biosecurity culture
Community members can provide an effective first line of defence in the battle against plant pest incursions, but raising awareness of biosecurity issues is an essential first step in engaging hear
Biosecurity through community engagement: the OrdGuard case study
Publication Type | Presentation | |
Year of Publication | 2008 | |
Authors | Royce, P. | |
Meeting Name | The Social Science of Bio-security: a Practitioner's Workshop | |
Meeting Start Date | November 2008 |
Crossing the community-government communication border in managing citrus biosecurity in West Timor, Indonesia
Publication Type | Presentation | |
Year of Publication | 2009 | |
Authors | Mudita, W. | |
Meeting Name | CRCNPB 2009 Science Exchange | |
Meeting Start Date | 22 - 34 September 2009 | |
Meeting Location | Sunshine Coast |
Managing biosecurity across borders: an Australian-Indonesian partnership to develop a community management model for the management of EPP incursions
Publication Type | Presentation | |
Year of Publication | 2009 | |
Authors | Falk, I; Wallace, R.; Ndoen, M. | |
Meeting Name | CRCNPB 2009 Science Exchange | |
Meeting Start Date | 22 - 24 September 2009 | |
Meeting Location | Sunshine Coast |
You can’t have a conversation with a brochure! Fostering community engagement principles to bring about change in local biosecurity practice
Publication Type | Presentation | |
Year of Publication | 2009 | |
Authors | Royce, P. | |
Meeting Name | CRCNPB 2009 Science Exchange | |
Meeting Start Date | 22 - 24 September 2009 | |
Meeting Location | Sunshine Coast |
This project aimed to provide greater regional community engagement in plant biosecurity.
What is the biosecurity problem?
The success of industry biosecurity is dependent on the engagement of not only industry representatives but also the entire community. Regional areas of Australia are particularly vulnerable if sectors of the community do not appreciate and engage in plant biosecurity.
The main outputs of this project were to:
- identify existing biosecurity education and networks in the region
- analyse stakeholder groups and devise an incursion alert and intervention model
- identify a process for moving the models into the communities involved
- run the models possibly as case studies with their own formative participatory evaluation processes, and
- evaluate the whole project using formative data and provide a summative product that identifies failures, risks and bottlenecks, and documents change.
Who are the end-users of this research?
This project produced a new PhD graduate with skills in community engagement and education in relation to biosecurity issues. The graduate will be immediately employable within the Australian plant biosecurity industry to assist in community awareness and communication. The end-users of this project are the OrdGuard Regional Biosecurity plan and other industry Biosecurity plans.
STUDENT
Mr Paul Royce
Student CRC60011: OrdGuard Community Engagement - PhD
p.royce@crcplantbiosecurity.com.au
Phone: 08 8946 6863
Fax: 08 8946 6150
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PROJECT DETAILS
Complete
Supervisor
Associate Professor Karen Gibb and Professor Ian Falk (CDU) and Mr Lachlan Dobson (OrdGuard)
Supervising Institution
Charles Darwin University
Term
February 2006 - January 2009