The Mangal Play: a serious game to experience multi-stakeholder decision-making in complex mangrove social-ecological systems.

Farid Dahdouh Guebas, Kodikara Arachchilage Sunanda Kodikara, Jean Hugé, Nico Koedam, Iris Stiers, Cosmas Nzaka Munga, Meenakshi Poti, Karolien Van Puyvelde, Katherine Vande Velde

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

In order to achieve collaborative action in nature conservation and natural resources management, stakeholders have to understand and acknowledge other stakeholders’ interests, values, world visions and objectives and they have to overcome the problem of irrational decision-making through innate opposition discourses. In this paper we developed the Mangal Play, an experiential learning method to have participants adopt the role of a particular stakeholder in an imaginary mangrove forest social-ecological system (SES). The Mangal Play is a serious game, more specifically a role-play, aimed at promoting oral dialogues between 20 stakeholders involved in governance, fisheries, aquaculture, agriculture, forestry, tourism, transport, conservation and communication sectors. By providing tools to lecturers and scientists to execute it in a public or classroom setting, the Mangal Play stimulates a decision-making process while accepting compromise and distinguishing bottom-line issues from negotiable positions, and instructs about the behaviour of complex real-world systems in a safe learning environment. We exemplify how social network analysis can serve to visualise the outcome and further develop the Mangal Play. In this way we hope to help stakeholders take into account diverse positions in a rational decision-making process.

Original languageEnglish
Article number909793
JournalFrontiers in Marine Science
Volume9
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2022

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This paper was published with the support of the Belgian University Foundation. FD-G, MP and KV acknowledge the support from the Belgian National Science Foundation (FC34023 and 30200841). TN acknowledges the support from the Sri Lanka University Grants Commission (UGC/VC/DRIC/PG2019(I)SEUSL/01), FD-G and JH acknowledge the financial support of the project ‘EVAMAB – Economic valuation of ecosystem services in Man & Biosphere Reserves’ funded by the Belgian Science Policy Office - BELSPO (BL/58/UN32), and from Erasmus Mundus Masters Course/Joint Master Degree in Tropical Biodiversity and Ecosystems – TROPIMUNDO (2013-1939 & 2019-1451). FD-G, LJ, NK and SA acknowledge the education and research grants obtained from the VLIR-UOS-funded GREENDYKE Project (ZEIN2008PR347). FD-G and SB acknowledge the financial support of the BELSPO-funded MAMAFOREST-Project (SR/00/323). MV and JH received Global Minds mobility funding from Hasselt University; MV is supported by the Special Research Fund at Hasselt University (BOF20TT06).

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2022 Dahdouh-Guebas, Mafaziya Nijamdeen, Hugé, Dahdouh-Guebas, Di Nitto, Hamza, Kodikara Arachchilage, Koedam, Mancilla García, Mohamed, Mostert, Munga, Poti, Satyanarayana, Stiers, Van Puyvelde, Vanhove, Vande Velde and Ratsimbazafy.

Copyright:
Copyright 2022 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

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