Publications
Détails
Ashepet, M. G., Huyse, T., Jacobs, L., Anyolitho, M. K., Nyakato, V., Wigerinck, B., Kagoro-Rugunda, G., Vranken, L. & Michellier, C. 2024. ‘Can citizen science-generated data induce policy changes? Insights from policy actors from Uganda’. The European Citizen Science Association (ECSA) conference 2024. Book of abstracts. DOI: https://2024.ecsa.ngo/.
Résumé de colloque
Citizen science has received recognition as an appropriate tool to address
global challenges, shape policy and foster sustainable change. While examples
of how citizen science has induced policy changes are present in the Global
North where the approach is well established, scaling the uptake of citizen
science-generated evidence demands insights into the perceptions of key
actors influencing policy, be they government or not. However, in the Global
South, where citizen science is largely untapped, much remains unknown about
how citizen science is conceived by policy stakeholders. This study addresses
this gap by examining perceptions of policy actors towards citizen science in
Uganda, focusing on the factors that either facilitate or hinder their trust in
citizen science-generated data.
To achieve this, the study targeted three citizen science initiatives implemented
in southwest Uganda to monitor natural hazard disasters and freshwater snails
transmitting schistosomiasis. Purposive sampling was employed to select both
elected and technical leaders relevant to the objectives of these citizen science
initiatives. Eighty semi-structured interviews and nine focus group discussions
were conducted with leaders at the district, sub-county, and community levels,
followed by a thematic analysis of the data.
Preliminary results indicate that there is moderate trust in citizen science-
generated data amongst the leaders. Trust is attributed to factors such as
the presence of supporting evidence for the data and participant selection
procedures. Distrust seems to stem from concerns about the data quality
reported by the community members as well as the ‘quality’ of participants.
To foster trust in citizens’ science-generated data and facilitate impactful
citizen science, respondents suggest constant supervision by local stakeholders
particularly to verify the data. This underscores the importance of actively
involving local community members right from the inception of the project.