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OriginaltitelThree Horizons Workshop Transcript
Handle20.500.14123/1725
Datenart / TypLogfiles / Nutzungsdaten / Protokolle
Weitere Angaben: Transkript
RessourcentypText
Autor* in / Erzeuger* inFrietsch, Marina  0000-0001-5992-314X (Social-ecological Systems Institute (SESI), Leuphana Universität Lüneburg  02w2y2t16)
Beschreibung des DatensatzesThis dataset consists of the transcript of all notes generated during the three horizons workshop in Kigali, Rwanda, a multi-stakeholder workshop targeting ecosystem restoration with the focus on Rwanda. The event took place on 31 January 2024. The three horizons framework is a participatory approach that engages with normative futures and helps develop pathways that connect the present system with desirable future states based on stakeholder input. Horizon one (H1) describes the present dominant system, horizon three (H3) relates to the long-term successor of H1 and represents a desired future system state, and horizon two (H2) denotes strategic pathways to bridge H1 and H3. Stakeholders explored current restoration practices (H1), envisioned desirable futures for restoration (H3), and developed tangible strategies to move forward these priorities in Rwanda (H2). The researchers facilitated the process without providing input on content, whereas a diverse group of Rwanda-based restoration experts (n=20) representing science, government, and NGOs shaped the actual content of the discussion. The restoration experts were randomly assigned to six groups for rounds one and two. In the first round (H1), experts discussed two questions about the present, noting key points on red cards ("Of the established ways of doing restoration in western Rwanda, what do you want to see less of in the future?" and "Of the established ways of doing restoration in western Rwanda, what do you want to keep in the future?"). For the second round (H3), two future-oriented questions were discussed, and key points noted on green cards ("What would ideal restoration in western Rwanda look like in the future?" and "What are innovative and inspirational practices in restoration today that could be scaled up to realize ideal restoration in the future?"). After each round (H1 and H3), each group presented their insights, and the researcgers collected the cards and displayed them on a large illustration of the three horizons. Drawing on the collected cards for H1 and H3, for the third round (H2), five emerging themes during a workshop break were identified. The researchers then asked the restoration experts to get together in groups based on the theme they were most interested in to note tangible strategies that might help to transform restoration into the desired future. Experts' findings from this round were shared in the plenum, and displayed on blue cards. After the workshop, the red, green, and blue cards were iteratively coded to identify recurring ideas. Based on this, insights on present and future restoration (H1 and H3 respectively) were summarized. Tangible strategies (H2) for each emerging theme were synthesized into short narratives.
Angewandte MethodenTranskription
SchlagwörterSozial-ökonomisches System; Ruanda; Ökosystem; Restaurierung; Nachhaltigkeit; Social-economic System; Rwanda; Ecosystem; Restoration; Sustainability
Thematische EinordnungNachhaltige Entwicklung
Untersuchungsgebiet (Geo)Land: Ruanda
Veröffentlicht durchMedien- und Informationszentrum, Leuphana Universität Lüneburg
Übergeordneter Datenbestand Data PhD Frietsch
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