Abstract

Report cards are increasingly used to provide ongoing snap-shots of progress towards specific ecosystem health goals, particularly in coastal regions where planners need to balance competing demands for coastal resources from a range of industries. While most previous report cards focus on the biophysical components of the system, there is a growing interest in including the social and economic implications of ecosystem management to provide a greater social-ecological system understanding. Such a report card was requested on the Gladstone Harbour area in central Queensland, Australia. Gladstone Harbour adjoins the southern Great Barrier Reef, and is also a major industrial and shipping port. Balancing social, economic and environmental interests is therefore of great concern to the regional managers. While environmental benchmarking procedures are well established within Australia (and elsewhere), a method for assessing social and economic performance of coastal management is generally lacking. The key aim of this study was to develop and pilot a system for the development of a report card relating to appropriate cultural, social and economic objectives. The approach developed uses a range of multicriteria decision analysis methods to assess and combine different qualitative and quantitative measures, including the use of Bayesian Belief Networks to combine the different measures and provide an overall quantitative score for each of the key management objectives. The approach developed is readily transferable for purposes of similar assessments in other regions.

Highlights

  • Report cards are used in a wide range of areas as a communication tool to inform key stakeholders about the relative performance of an industry or activity

  • The aim of this paper is to present, by way of example, an approach to develop a social, cultural and economic report card to assess the performance of regional management of an industrial region in a highly sensitive environment

  • To derive the Conditional probability tables (CPTs), the potential combinations of outcomes (A-E) for each indicator were multiplied by the set of community preferences in order to determine the distribution of combined outcomes for the broader objective set Formally, this is given by O = WCT, where W is an mÃn matrix of weights, where n is the number of indicators, and m is the number of respondents, C is a 5nÃn matrix of objective outcome combinations

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Summary

Introduction

Report cards are used in a wide range of areas as a communication tool to inform key stakeholders about the relative performance of an industry or activity. Originating in schools as a means of informing parents about students’ progress, they have evolved to report on the relative performance of schools, universities and health care to provide an incentive for these industries to improve their performance [1,2,3]. Variations of the report card system have been applied to the food industry to inform consumers about healthy eating choices and/or. Cultural and Economic Report Card for a Regional Harbour

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