<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><codeBook xmlns="ddi:codebook:2_5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="ddi:codebook:2_5 https://ddialliance.org/Specification/DDI-Codebook/2.5/XMLSchema/codebook.xsd" version="2.5"><docDscr><citation><titlStmt><titl>Dataset: Introducing a practice perspective on monitoring for adaptive management</titl><IDNo agency="DOI">doi:10.7910/DVN/P7BPHE</IDNo></titlStmt><distStmt><distrbtr source="archive">Harvard Dataverse</distrbtr><distDate>2019-07-16</distDate></distStmt><verStmt source="archive"><version date="2019-07-16" type="RELEASED">1</version></verStmt><biblCit>West, Simon; Beilin, Ruth; Wagenaar, Hendrik, 2019, "Dataset: Introducing a practice perspective on monitoring for adaptive management", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/P7BPHE, Harvard Dataverse, V1</biblCit></citation></docDscr><stdyDscr><citation><titlStmt><titl>Dataset: Introducing a practice perspective on monitoring for adaptive management</titl><IDNo agency="DOI">doi:10.7910/DVN/P7BPHE</IDNo></titlStmt><rspStmt><AuthEnty affiliation="Stockholms universitet">West, Simon</AuthEnty><AuthEnty affiliation="University of Melbourne">Beilin, Ruth</AuthEnty><AuthEnty affiliation="King's College London">Wagenaar, Hendrik</AuthEnty><othId role="Data Collector">Simon West</othId><othId role="Project Member">Ruth Beilin</othId><othId role="Project Member">Hendrik Wagenaar</othId></rspStmt><prodStmt><producer affiliation="Stockholm Resilience Centre, Stockholm University">Simon West</producer><prodDate>2019-05-01</prodDate><prodPlac>Australia</prodPlac><grantNo agency="Vetenskapsrådet">2011-1837</grantNo><grantNo agency="ARC-CEED (Australian Research Council - Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions)">2011-1837</grantNo></prodStmt><distStmt><distrbtr source="archive">Harvard Dataverse</distrbtr><contact affiliation="Stockholms universitet" email="simon.west@su.se">West, Simon</contact><depositr>West, Simon</depositr><depDate>2019-05-17</depDate></distStmt><holdings URI="https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/P7BPHE"/></citation><stdyInfo><subject><keyword xml:lang="en">Earth and Environmental Sciences</keyword><keyword xml:lang="en">Social Sciences</keyword><keyword vocab="Wikipedia" vocabURI="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adaptive_management">adaptive management</keyword><keyword vocab="Wikipedia" vocabURI="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_monitoring">environmental monitoring</keyword><keyword vocab="Wikipedia" vocabURI="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evidence-based_conservation">evidence-based conservation</keyword><keyword vocab="USGS" vocabURI="https://www.usgs.gov/centers/pwrc/science/structured-decision-making?qt-science_center_objects=0#qt-science_center_objects">structured decision-making</keyword><keyword vocab="Wikipedia" vocabURI="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Practice_theory">practice theory</keyword><keyword vocab="Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy" vocabURI="https://www.iep.utm.edu/pragmati/">pragmatist philosophy</keyword><keyword vocab="Wikipedia" vocabURI="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Process_philosophy">relational thinking</keyword><keyword vocab="Science" vocabURI="https://science.sciencemag.org/content/353/6303/969">science-policy interface</keyword><keyword vocab="Wikipedia" vocabURI="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Applied_ecology">applied ecology</keyword></subject><abstract date="2019-05-17">This research project explored the science and practice of ecological monitoring for adaptive management. We conducted a qualitative case study of a project intended to develop an adaptive management approach to vegetation restoration in the ‘Wildlands National Park,’ Australia (hereafter referred to as 'the Wildlands AM project').&#xd;
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‘Wildlands’ is a pseudonym – all place and personal names associated with the AM project have been changed to protect the participants’ anonymity. &#xd;
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Our qualitative case study of the Wildlands AM project adopted a theoretical perspective rooted in practice theory (Cook, S.D.M. and Wagenaar, H. 2012. 'Navigating the Eternally Unfolding Present: Towards an Epistemology of Practice. The American Review of Public Administration 42(1): 31-38). &#xd;
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Data collection methods consisted of one observation event and open-ended qualitative interviews. &#xd;
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The observation event consisted of observing a three-day scientific field trip to the Wildlands National Park undertaken by scientists in the Wildlands AM project. The field trip was a pilot study that was intended to contribute information to a broader process of developing an adaptive management approach to vegetation restoration at Wildlands.&#xd;
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Follow-up, open-ended qualitative interviews were conducted with most Wildlands AM project participants, including scientists on the field trip and representatives of the Wildlands management authority. These interviews tool place over a period of six months following the field trip as the scientists were writing up a final report to the management authority.&#xd;
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The data corpus was analyzed using deductive thematic analysis, where a coding scheme was devised from pre-existing theoretical constructs (Cook and Wagenaar 2012) and applied to the written interview transcripts and field notes using Nvivo for Mac qualitative data analysis software.&#xd;
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The fully anonymised dataset stored here contains the written field notes taken during the observation event; the written transcripts of the qualitative interviews; a summary description of the characters that appear in the data corpus and their roles in relation to the adaptive management project; the qualitative coding scheme used to analyse the data; and the participant information sheet and participant consent form provided to participants prior to each interview.&#xd;
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Further contextual, methodological and conceptual details that may help with the interpretation of this dataset are available in the associated scientific paper: West, S., Beilin, R. &amp; Wagenaar, H. 2019. Introducing a practice perspective on adaptive management. People and Nature, https://doi.org/10.1002/pan3.10033.</abstract><sumDscr><timePrd cycle="P1" event="start" date="2014-03-01">2014-03-01</timePrd><timePrd cycle="P1" event="end" date="2014-12-31">2014-12-31</timePrd><collDate cycle="P1" event="start" date="2014-03-01">2014-03-01</collDate><collDate cycle="P1" event="end" date="2014-12-31">2014-12-31</collDate><nation>Australia</nation><anlyUnit>Groups&#xd;
Institutions/organizations</anlyUnit><dataKind>Transcribed qualitative interview data</dataKind><dataKind>Field notes</dataKind><dataKind>Qualitative coding frame</dataKind><dataKind>Study information sheet</dataKind><dataKind>Study consent form</dataKind></sumDscr></stdyInfo><method><dataColl><dataCollector>Simon West</dataCollector><collectorTraining>PhD Sustainability Science</collectorTraining><frequenc>The observation event took place in May 2014. The interviews were conducted at regular intervals between March and December 2014.</frequenc><sampProc>We identified an AM project initiated by a public national parks management authority (‘the Authority’) in partnership with a world-renowned university (‘the University’).  The project was intended to develop an adaptive approach to the management of grazing pressure on threatened vegetation at the ‘Wildlands National Park,’ Australia. We contacted the two scientists responsible for the project, Sam and Val, in January 2014, when they were halfway through their two-year contract on the project and were preparing to embark on a field trip to Wildlands. Our research consisted of one observation event occurring over three days (the field trip) and twelve semi-structured follow-up interviews conducted with project participants.</sampProc><collMode>Open ended interviews&#xd;
Participant observation</collMode><resInstru>Unstructured</resInstru><sources/><collSitu>Interviewees were highly cooperative&#xd;
Interviews lasted between 30 minutes and 2 hours</collSitu></dataColl><anlyInfo/></method><dataAccs><setAvail/><useStmt/><notes type="DVN:TOU" level="dv">&lt;a href="http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0">CC0 1.0&lt;/a></notes></dataAccs><othrStdyMat><relPubl><citation><titlStmt><titl>West, S., Beilin, R. &amp; Wagenaar, H. 2019. Introducing a practice perspective on adaptive management. People and Nature, https://doi.org/10.1002/pan3.10033.</titl><IDNo agency="doi">https://doi.org/10.1002/pan3.10033</IDNo></titlStmt><biblCit>West, S., Beilin, R. &amp; Wagenaar, H. 2019. Introducing a practice perspective on adaptive management. People and Nature, https://doi.org/10.1002/pan3.10033.</biblCit></citation></relPubl></othrStdyMat></stdyDscr><otherMat ID="f3471499" URI="https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/access/datafile/3471499" level="datafile"><labl>CodingSpecification_PracticeAdaptiveManagement2019.pdf</labl><notes level="file" type="DATAVERSE:CONTENTTYPE" subject="Content/MIME Type">application/pdf</notes></otherMat><otherMat ID="f3471500" URI="https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/access/datafile/3471500" level="datafile"><labl>ConsentForm_PracticeAdaptiveManagement2019.pdf</labl><notes level="file" type="DATAVERSE:CONTENTTYPE" subject="Content/MIME Type">application/pdf</notes></otherMat><otherMat ID="f3471501" URI="https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/access/datafile/3471501" level="datafile"><labl>FieldNotes_PracticeAdaptiveManagement2019.pdf</labl><notes level="file" type="DATAVERSE:CONTENTTYPE" subject="Content/MIME Type">application/pdf</notes></otherMat><otherMat ID="f3471502" URI="https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/access/datafile/3471502" level="datafile"><labl>InformationSheet_PracticeAdaptiveManagement2019.pdf</labl><notes level="file" type="DATAVERSE:CONTENTTYPE" subject="Content/MIME Type">application/pdf</notes></otherMat><otherMat ID="f3471503" URI="https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/access/datafile/3471503" level="datafile"><labl>Names_PracticeAdaptiveManagement2019.pdf</labl><notes level="file" type="DATAVERSE:CONTENTTYPE" subject="Content/MIME Type">application/pdf</notes></otherMat><otherMat ID="f3471504" URI="https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/access/datafile/3471504" level="datafile"><labl>Transcript1Sam_PracticeAdaptiveManagement2019.pdf</labl><notes level="file" type="DATAVERSE:CONTENTTYPE" subject="Content/MIME Type">application/pdf</notes></otherMat><otherMat ID="f3471505" URI="https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/access/datafile/3471505" level="datafile"><labl>Transcript2Sam Val_PracticeAdaptiveManagement2019.pdf</labl><notes level="file" type="DATAVERSE:CONTENTTYPE" subject="Content/MIME Type">application/pdf</notes></otherMat><otherMat ID="f3471506" URI="https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/access/datafile/3471506" level="datafile"><labl>Transcript3Sam Val_PracticeAdaptiveManagement2019.pdf</labl><notes level="file" type="DATAVERSE:CONTENTTYPE" subject="Content/MIME Type">application/pdf</notes></otherMat><otherMat ID="f3471507" URI="https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/access/datafile/3471507" level="datafile"><labl>Transcript4Logan_PracticeAdaptiveManagement2019.pdf</labl><notes level="file" type="DATAVERSE:CONTENTTYPE" subject="Content/MIME Type">application/pdf</notes></otherMat></codeBook>