37 TOOL: Community Institutions Sketch Map Purpose: This tool can be adapted and used to provide a visual overview of what comprises the community’s decision-making system. In its basic form, a community sketch map is used to identify locations of important resources or sites, systems of resource use, and customary or property boundaries. In this particular adaptation, it is intended to identify key institutions, groups, and individuals that make decision that affect those resources and areas. Resource: Adapted from basic community sketch map such as in 80 Tools for Participatory Development (Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA), 2008) o o o o o o o o Facilitate a discussion about key physical features and resources that the community would like to include in the map. Examples include rivers or lakes, forests, mountains and valleys, cultivation areas, sacred sites, and wildlife populations. Not every feature has to be included, especially if it will make the map too crowded or confusing to be useful. Consider developing a legend for different symbols or colours that may be used. Using large sheets of paper or a blackboard, begin by marking the location of important reference points such as houses and transportation routes. A representative group of about 10 people could continue mapping the location of other key features and resources (see Figure 3 for an example). Often little facilitation is needed. Facilitate a discussion about key Figure 3: Example of a basic community sketch map (Source: IICA, institutions, groups, and 2008) individuals who make decisions that affect the resources on the map. These may include formal systems such as a traditional chief or village association as well as informal systems such as women who cultivate fruit trees. Decisions could range from community-wide management plans to day-to-day collection of resources. Continue working with the small group to add these institutions and decision-makers to the relevant locations on the map. This could be done by labeling or using a different colour or pattern to shade in the relevant area. Hold a plenary session or broader group discussion to verify the information and gather further inputs or suggestions. Consider facilitating a discussion about what the map shows, for example, overlaps or gaps in decision-making, degree of clarity amongst community members of how decisions are made and by whom, and so on. Transcribe the final version of the map and make at least one copy for safe-keeping. TOOL: Community Decision-making Calendar Purpose: This tool can be adapted and used to provide clarity about the decision-making processes that occur throughout a community-defined seasonal cycle. It can be used to raise awareness within the community about when important decisions are made and to promote transparency and participation. Resource: Adapted from basic seasonal calendars such as in 80 Tools for Participatory Development (IICA, 2008)

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