Alexandra Knight
Research co-design facilitator
NRM Regions Australia
7 July 2023
We’ve just published 3 new impact stories showcasing the significance of the hub’s research. Click the links below to read more about the hub’s real-world impact.
We’re trialling new ways to co-design applied environmental research to ensure its relevance to managers of Australia’s landscapes.
By embedding facilitators in organisations that represent the interests of larger networks of on-ground land managers, we’re ensuring that research projects are co-designed through direct partnerships with key research users. Having facilitators who are employed outside of the hub’s research providers has proven to be an effective way of building trust in the relevance of the hub and establishing research ‘champions’ outside of universities and government organisations.
The hub employs part-time research facilitators at NRM Regions Australia and the Indigenous Desert Alliance. They have held workshops and meetings with members of their respective stakeholder organisations and at their national conferences. Their research facilitation is ensuring that our projects are developed in response to user needs and feature ongoing collaboration and knowledge sharing.
The National Environmental Science Program (NESP) is the current iteration of a long-term investment in research by the Australian Government that began in 2006. Research impact often occurs after projects end, with the publication of scientific papers that are integrated into the body of knowledge and continue to influence policy and paradigms.
At least 29 scientific papers arising from research conducted under the Northern Australia Environmental Resources Hub (NAERH) during the first phase of NESP have been published since that hub finished at the end of 2021. This is more than one-quarter of the total number of papers (110) published (so far) from that hub’s research, highlighting that research outputs continue to be produced well beyond the life of a hub.
The hub’s dedicated researchers represent a significant value-add for the program by continuing to analyse data and publish manuscripts long after their funding is finished. These papers from the last 17 years of continuous research funding continue to be published and accessible for posterity on our website.
The Resilient Landscapes Hub is dedicated to finding innovative and effective ways to communicate its research findings and ensure they are publicly available for posterity.
While our research outputs are always co-designed with key research users to meet their needs, our mandate to make outputs and resources publicly available means that other decision-makers and land managers can access the hub’s research and use it to make evidence-based decisions – both now and in the future. An example of this is a new website synthesising more than 2 decades of research into the weed gamba grass.
The hub is also committed to empowering others to communicate science better by developing and providing resources, such as our symbol library, to hub researchers and others with the goal of elevating science communication and making it credible, accessible and relatable.
Research co-design facilitator
NRM Regions Australia
Key researcher and research co-design facilitator
Indigenous Desert Alliance
Research Executive Committee and Western Node Leader
The University of Western Australia
Key Researcher
Charles Darwin University
Knowledge Broker and Science Communicator
The University of Western Australia
Charles Darwin University
Research Executive Committee and Southern Node Leader
University of Tasmania
James Cook University
Charles Darwin University
Key researcher
The University of Western Australia
Key Researcher
Griffith University
Key researcher
Griffith University
Key Researcher
James Cook University
Key Researcher
The University of Western Australia
Project team member
The University of Western Australia
Kakadu Indigenous Research Coordinator
Northern Land Council
Charles Darwin University
Hub Leader
The University of Western Australia
James Cook University
Northern Territory DEPWS
DEPWS (Northern Territory Government)
Project team member
The University of Western Australia
Griffith University
Griffith University
Northern Territory DEPWS
CSIRO
Key Researcher
Charles Darwin University
Key Researcher
Griffith University
Research Executive Committee and Northern Node Leader
James Cook University
Research Executive Committee and Eastern Node Leader
Griffith University
The University of Western Australia
The University of Western Australia
Charles Darwin University
Griffith University
Charles Darwin University-CSIRO
James Cook University
Key Researcher
DESI (Queensland Government)
Griffith University
Project team member
Griffith University
Charles Darwin University
Key Researcher
The University of Western Australia
NAILSMA
Charles Darwin University
Key Researcher
CSIRO
Griffith University
Griffith University
Key Researcher
Griffith University
Key researcher
University of Tasmania
James Cook University
James Cook University
Charles Darwin University
Want to know more about the Resilient Landscapes Hub's activities and our research into practical solutions to environmental problems? Stay informed about activities, research, publications, events and more through the Hub newsletter.
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