Content and complexity of stakeholders’ mental models of socio-ecological systems

Publication date

2023-02

Authors

van den Broek, KarlijnORCID 0000-0002-0933-1194ISNI 0000000460628027
Luomba, Joseph
van den Broek, JanISNI 0000000392899959
Fischer, Helen

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Stakeholders’ interactions with environmental resources are influenced by their mental models of the socio- ecological system of the environmental resource. Individual differences in such mental models are particularly important to identify, as diverse mental models may be associated with different behaviour or policy preferences and affect collaborative conservation efforts. In the present work, we explore stakeholders’ mental models of a socio-ecological system and assess content and complexity differences across fishing experience levels, migration status, and regions. We mapped Tanzanian fishers’ (N = 185) mental models of the drivers of the Nile perch stock fluctuation at Lake Victoria. The findings show that (1) fishers’ mental models were complex and diverse, (2) mental models focused on the causal influence of destructive fishing activities, (3) mental model complexity, but not content, varied across regions, and (4) fishing experience and migration status were not consistently related to mental model complexity or content. These results have important implications for environmental resource management at Lake Victoria

Keywords

Causal beliefs, Cognitive maps, Fisheries, Mental models, Natural resource conservation, Systems thinking, Social Psychology, Applied Psychology

Citation

van den Broek, K L, Luomba, J, van den Broek, J & Fischer, H 2023, 'Content and complexity of stakeholders’ mental models of socio-ecological systems', Journal of Environmental Psychology, vol. 85, 101906, pp. 1-24. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvp.2022.101906