With massively overweight suitcases full of training materials and workbooks, the ‘behaviour change’ team landed at Selayar, Indonesia, during May to deliver its positive environmental behaviour (waste management) pilot program.
The team, comprising activity leader Erik Simmons, The University of Queensland (UQ), CCRES coordinator (Indonesia) Ibu Yuni Kumoloraras and facilitator-trainer Paula Bradley, Currie Communications, had a two-fold workplan: first, to train four local facilitators to deliver the program at the chosen pilot site (Bontolebang village on the island of Pasi Gusung) and second, to support training delivery to 48 female participants over two days.
Together with the team at the Triple P Innovation Precinct at UQ, PhD researcher Mr Simmons designed the pilot program based on the results of the team’s behavioural diagnosis work conducted last November using surveys and focus groups.
Analysis of the findings from the focus groups revealed three behaviours that collectively stuck out as problematic candidate behaviours for targeting – bomb fishing, cyanide fishing, and waste disposal.
Waste disposal turned out to be the preferred option to target with the pilot program: “While it did rank slightly behind the other options for impact, waste disposal ranked optimally for accessibility, salience and generalisability,” Mr Simmons said.