Gaming their way to sustainable development

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Africans who live next to an internationally known wildlife area been questioned by more than a few researchers. That can lead to questionnaire fatigue. But what if you get to express your thoughts by playing an engaging board game? Credit: Photo: Per Harald Olsen/NTNU
Africans who live next to an internationally known wildlife area been questioned by more than a few researchers. That can lead to questionnaire fatigue. But what if you get to express your thoughts by playing an engaging board game? Credit: Photo: Per Harald Olsen/NTNU

Serengeti National Park is home to a breath-taking array of wild animals, from lions to elephants and migrating wildebeests. But an equally important part of this ecosystem is the local people living on the fringes of the area.

They will be the ones most affected by government management decisions. At the same time, their day-to-day actions and livelihood choices determine whether the park’s ecosystems are protected.

So when researchers with a multinational EU-funded project called AfricanBioServices wanted to know what people in the area around the park wanted for their future, and what they thought about development and the park, they took an unusual approach to having this conversation.

They developed a board game that let local people see how different land management approaches — and their own choices — might affect their own lives in the future. That game, “Savanna Life”, has now won an international prize at the 10th Ecosystem Services in Practice World Conference, held in Hannover, Germany earlier this autumn.

Savanna Life

The game allows for four players, with each player representing one family.

The game reflects real life in that there is a limited amount of land for grazing cows or agriculture.

The players use the land for collecting food for their livestock and families and obtaining happiness through investing in education and healthcare. The game is played in five rounds, with each round representing a year in the life of the village.

Each year the number of family members in each household increases, again reflecting real life. The number of new household members is partly up to the player.

Livestock numbers can also increase, which causes land to be increasingly scarce. This in turn requires players to find common solutions, in particular when disasters are introduced by the event cards.

At the end of year five, the players win if all the families in the village are above a certain level of happiness.

For more info see: savannalife.no

People part of the ecosystem

Bente Jessen Graae is a plant ecologist and professor at NTNU’s Department of Biology who has been a part of the AfricanBioServices project. The project focused on Serengeti National Park and the Mara National Reserve and surrounding areas in Tanzania and Kenya.

Researchers call this area the Greater Serengeti-Mara Ecosystem, and not surprisingly, it contains a lot of people whose lives depend on the natural resources of the area — and whose behaviour is critical to the conservation of the ecosystem. Over the course of working on the project, the researchers realized that the best science and management plans wouldn’t work if the local people weren’t involved, she said.

“When you as an ecologist see all the human-wildlife conflicts working against conservation in areas like Tanzania and Kenya, you realize that it’s urgent to bring local communities on board in discussions about sustainable development for both people and nature,” Graae said. “We wanted to hear people’s opinions and what kind of future they wanted.”

A conversation starter

Graae realized she needed to reach out to villagers in a way that would give them a chance to say what they really thought.

“If you just use questionnaires, people may answer what they think researchers want to hear,” she said. “But when you play a game with people, we think that people become more open to discussing things.”

Graae’s colleague, Martin Reinhardt Nielsen, an associate professor from the University of Copenhagen’s Department of Food and Resource Economics, also pointed out that people in areas where many researchers have worked before may be fed up with “being asked too many questions in too many surveys where they rarely see the results or receive any kind of feedback on what that could be used for or how it can help improve their circumstances.”

“A game offers an alternative way for researchers to learn about local peoples preferences, but also for local people to gain insights into their own circumstances,” he said.

A game also could play yet another role, Graae realized — it could be used by students in NTNU’s Natural Resources Management programme as an interactive teaching tool for classes on sustainable land use planning, governance and behaviour.

Those two observations led to the development of “Savanna Life”.

“It’s fun, but it’s also serious,” Graae said. “And it opens up for conversation between people.”

From idea to board game

The idea of using games to explore issues around has a longer history than you might think. As early as 1968, educators were exploring the idea of using games to simulate different scenarios. Educators also realized that games where players take turns give all students, particularly those who might not participate in a classroom discussion, a chance to voice their opinions.

“If you just use questionnaires, people may answer what they think researchers want to hear. But when you play a game with people, we find that people become more open to discussing things.

For Graae and her colleagues, however, a game also meant that they could allow people from the area to see how different choices might affect the future of their villages and the lands around them.

It had to be realistic — and fun.

So Graae and her team hired a board game developer and established the ground rules. The game allows four people to play as four individual families in a village.

The aim was that all the families in the village had to be happy, as measured by a “happiness score”. That meant players had to collaborate to win.

The game also included “event cards” that reflected real things that might happen in a village, such as an elephant attack or a drought leading to loss of crops or livestock. There’s also a protected national park where players can poach wildlife if they choose. But if they make that choice, there are risk cards that determine what happens to the poacher.

“Sometimes nothing happens, and they get away with it,” Graae said. “And sometimes something really bad happens.” Both of these outcomes are realistic, she said.

Twelve villages, two game ranger groups and two district staff groups

Once they had refined the game, the researchers took it on a road trip to twelve villages in both Kenya and Tanzania. They recruited 12 people, half male and half female, from each village. Each participant was paid about NOK 40, equal to about two day’s pay. Local leaders helped recruit players.

The researchers set up two groups from each village to play the game, one male and one female group. The remaining four people were asked to discuss a series of four posters that depicted different future scenarios.

The researchers then watched and systematically recorded every move made by each player in the game. They also recorded the outcome after each round in terms of points (happiness), money earned, surviving livestock, villager tokens and how that matched up with the amount of food produced.

Women better than men

The University of Copenhagen’s Nielsen has the task of analysing all the information he and the other researchers collected.

Although he is not done with the analyses yet, one of Nielsen’s preliminary findings is that women almost always outperformed the men.

“This suggests that women may be the better agents of change striving for sustainable natural resource management in the Greater Serengeti-Mara Ecosystem,” he said.

Jeremia Zachayo, who was a community facilitator for the project and helped villagers understand the game, also saw that women tended to be better at the game than men.

” I noted that women understand family management better than men, because they always were the winners of the game,” he said.

Another surprise was that the higher-level district staff played worse than villagers, Nielsen said.

“They were less cooperative, more risk-prone, poorer at wildlife management, played in a fashion that favoured population growth, and as a result lost more happiness (as the measure of playing successfully),” he said while cautioning that researchers only had data from two games played by district staff. That means that these findings are inconclusive and only suggest a possible trend.

AfricanBioServices

AfricanBioServices was an EU-funded research project coordinated by NTNU that investigated ecosystem services in the Greater Serengeti-Mara Ecosystem in eastern Africa.

The main aim of the research project was to understand how the ongoing climate change, human population growth and land use change affect biodiversity and human well-being, and use this information to derive novel solutions for a future sustainable development.

The project, with more than 100 researchers from Norway, the Netherlands, Scotland, Denmark, Germany, Tanzania and Kenya, was funded with EUR 9.89 million grant from Horizon 2020.

The four-year project ended in August 2019.

Read more about the project here: africanbioservices.eu

A way to test alternatives

Overall, Nielsen said, he thinks the game has helped people get a better perspective of the consequences of their livelihood strategy choices for themselves and others.

“This game directly enabled players to identify problems created by their current livelihood strategies, safely test various alternatives to what they currently do and discuss and agree on possible solutions to relevant environmental and development problems,” he said. “It also enabled different actor types – community members, protected area managers and district staff — to see the constraints on other’s livelihoods and get a better idea about why other actor groups act as they do.”

But an open question in using games in general, and also for Savanna Life, is whether the game can actually lead to a lasting change in behaviour.

“We were only able to collect information about the insights players gained and their statements about the extent to which these insights had made them consider making real-life changes in livelihood strategies,” he said. “But the overwhelming majority of players stated that they had gained important insights from playing the game that they would try to use or implement in their daily life to improve their life outcomes and protect the environment”.

Don’t want outside help

The four villagers who didn’t play the game talked to researchers about four posters that depicted possible futures.

For example, one of the posters, “Green Haven”, portrayed a future based on ecotourism, which is touted by many in the Western world as a solution to helping lesser developed countries earn hard currency while supporting their traditional lifestyles.

But the researchers were surprised to find that most people wanted local sustainable development and not more Western intervention.

“Many didn’t want to be dependent on ecotourism and the West. They would rather have control over their natural resources than depend on our money,” Graae said. Most people though also wanted better infrastructure, such as roads, and electricity.

And they all wanted more education.

Popular with students, too

A second goal for the game was to develop an alternative teaching tool for students in Norway. The Departments of Biology’s and Geography’s master’s degree in Natural Resource Management now has about 32 students, with roughly half from outside of Norway.

Nazia Tabassum is one such student, originally from Dhaka, Bangladesh. For her master’s study at NTNU, she is working on a project looking at what the melting of glaciers will do to the hydrology of Norway and Central Asia.

She also had a chance to play the game.

“I was really fascinated by the game,” she said. “The game presented the concept of a complex savanna community and its reliance on nature in a very comprehensive and lively manner.”

She also could see a use for the game in natural resource management work.

“In the real world, stakeholders’ influence and control over management policies are crucial. Not all stakeholders have the same level of understanding of the entire system where wildlife, humans and their cultural values co-exist,” she said. “Therefore, the game can be very useful in educating stakeholders, particularly those who are directly or indirectly involved in wildlife protection and management works. The local people may also have a better understanding of the wise use of resources for a sustainable livelihood.”

Pedagogical underpinnings and copyrights

The AfricanBioServices project ended in August this year, but Graae and her colleagues have been awarded additional funds to keep developing the game so that it can be used as a teaching tool in Norway.

“What we realized was that you can develop a game, you can play it, but it needs to be embedded into good pedagogical practices,” she said. Some of the funding will be used to do exactly that, as well as to develop different downloadable packages that teachers can use in the classroom.

But what about the average person who might want to see what “Savanna Life” is like?

Alas, you won’t be able to wrap the game up to put it under your Christmas tree, Graae said — at least not this year.

The game will have to be copyrighted, and then the researchers have to find someone to sell and distribute the game, she said.

“We’re working on it,” she said.

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December 14, 2019 2:06 pm

WTF

Gilbert K. Arnold
Reply to  Richard Chenoweth
December 14, 2019 3:32 pm

SSMT

Geoff Sherrington
December 14, 2019 3:30 pm

A major observation about society has emerged during my 80-odd years. It is the large proportionate increase in people paid to tell other people how to lead their lives.
This is just more of it.
Even the concept of national parks is an expression of it. Remote from the action seen by residents and neighbours, we have these mini-dictators telling the locals how to lead their lives. Geoff S

Chaamjamal
Reply to  Geoff Sherrington
December 14, 2019 4:32 pm

“It is the large proportionate increase in people paid to tell other people how to lead their lives”

Thank you Geoff Sherrington. Eco wackoism is a value system of the rich. The poor have other priorities.

https://tambonthongchai.com/2019/03/06/sdg/

Reply to  Geoff Sherrington
December 15, 2019 7:59 am

Geoff
It’s a new prohibition / Puritanism

https://imgur.com/gallery/32FQa39

jon Jewett
December 14, 2019 3:44 pm

I expect that the rules can be set for any outcome that you want. No problem if you know what should be. Like hockey sticks hiding the decline.

Latitude
Reply to  jon Jewett
December 14, 2019 4:50 pm

or when you set up some fake contrived “happy” score

MarkW
Reply to  jon Jewett
December 15, 2019 7:57 am

Games are a lot like models. They are grossly simplified versions of reality and the rules are based on the assumptions of the authors.

B d Clark
December 14, 2019 3:45 pm

Another example of control by deception letting people think they are part of the decision making when the decisions have already been made. It’s happening the world over.

Latitude
Reply to  B d Clark
December 14, 2019 5:43 pm

they decided what makes people happy…then graded them on their definition of happy

..and I’m sure 90% of it was all total BS…..johnny goes to college, gets a great education, becomes a world famous doctor….who wouldn’t choose that

commieBob
December 14, 2019 4:11 pm

I knew a war gamer and that is my experience with war games.

A properly designed war game does provide insight into historical battles. I remember one such game in particular. It was a WW2 tank battle, which the Soviets won. The insight I got was that the Germans were doomed, no matter what they did. Any other result would have required a major blunder on the part of the Soviets.

Based on the above, I would say that games can be enlightening. If nothing else, they can force the participants to consider things they might normally ignore.

I wonder if there’s something like Sim City for renewable energy in North America. That should be eye opening.

Russ Wood
Reply to  commieBob
December 16, 2019 1:40 am

“I wonder if there’s something like Sim City for renewable energy in North America”
There is! It’s called California!

michael hart
December 14, 2019 4:13 pm

“They developed a board game that let local people see how different land management approaches — and their own choices — might affect their own lives in the future.

[…] The main aim of the research project was to understand how the ongoing climate change, human population growth and land use change affect biodiversity and human well-being, and use this information to derive novel solutions for a future sustainable development.

Am I just a cynic for just wondering, or might the “dungeon masters” of this game have also hard-written into the rules that global warming will destroy them if they don’t play by the correct assumptions made their Nordic (oil-exporting) masters?

Like I say, just curious. Of course the real game of history tells the players that they should make themselves wealthy as quickly as possible using coal, oil, and gas.

Steve O
December 14, 2019 4:14 pm

I think we’re all going to have the same idea — to create a board game to show REALISTIC effects of policy. Everyone plays as a different country, except that China and India are like NPC’s (non-player characters).

The goal is to stay within 1.5 deg C, or to keep ppm below some number.
Raise taxes — almost no effect, but negative impact on the economy.
Impede coal — almost no effect.
India and China roll a die and on every side is a massive increase in emissions.
Obstruct nuclear power — almost no effect, but any effect is negative.
Obstruct reliable electricity in Africa — almost no effect, but millions of people die.
Dress up like a vagina at a protest — no effect.
Go sailing across the Atlantic instead of flying…

And at the end of the game, the final card is the game card. It says, “Thank you for your efforts. As it turns out, warming not not catastrophic. Actually, it was beneficial.

Michael Jankowski
December 14, 2019 4:15 pm

“…Another surprise was that the higher-level district staff played worse than villagers, Nielsen said…

…the researchers were surprised to find that most people wanted local sustainable development and not more Western intervention…”

How idiotic were these researchers to find these results surprising?

michael hart
December 14, 2019 4:18 pm

“The game allows for four players, with each player representing one family.”

So, completely unlike the real world then? I won’t even begin to discuss why they discovered their game was played more successfully by women than men.

Actually, at some risk, I will. Was the game constructed mainly by Scandinavian women?

December 14, 2019 4:42 pm

More self satisfaction faux models, with rules generated by people external to the process.

“Each participant was paid about NOK 40, equal to about two day’s pay. Local leaders helped recruit players.”

Two days pay.
People chosen to be players were friends of the local leaders.
Graft, incest and non-reality rules, what more can a model want?

December 14, 2019 4:45 pm

I knew a family in Zimbabwe who restored wild life in their area in the south – an area where the wild life had been decimated by so called “freedom fighters”. They combined this with farming with cattle and did so at a great cost to themselves. Sadly the wild life was later decimated in the area by illegal poaching allowed by the corrupt government. Those living in Europe especially the northern parts are naive and ignorant about the realities in Africa. With the levels of corruption, incompetence, maladministration and fraud in African governments there is no way to succeed at sustainable development by using board games.

Patrick MJD
Reply to  Michael in Dublin
December 14, 2019 8:26 pm

My wife and her direct family are all from Zimbabwe (Actually, she is Malawian by citizenship but I digress) and most are, now, all here in Australia. They would all concur with your comment. I can add, none of them, nor any of their remaining family or their friends in Africa are the least bit worried about climate change.

She was back in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, recently for a few weeks due to a family tradegy and there were power outages every day for extended periods. This is the future the IPCC, UN, politicians, celebrities and “Climate Believers” want for everyone, apart from them of course.

Alan
December 14, 2019 4:50 pm

The game measures happiness as defined by the creators, so if you don’t play how they want, I you can’t win.

What a load of wasteful tosh.
Was one of the options cheap reliable electricity from fossil fuels,? That would make the locals happy but not the researchers to

John Bell
December 14, 2019 5:14 pm

People part of the ecosystem.
does that mean lions can eat you and you can’t out run them? great!

Rob_Dawg
December 14, 2019 5:26 pm

This role playing game has the same fatal flaw as Sim City. To win you have to act the way the game designers wish not act to effect the best outcome.

Tom Johnson
December 14, 2019 7:30 pm

“The game reflects real life in that there is a limited amount of land for grazing cows or agriculture.”

I stopped reading right there. It’s the basic Socialist fallacy: There is only a limited amount of wealth, so it must be distributed equally. It totally ignores two critical bases of capitalism – wealth can be created with hard work and ingenuity, and also the basic human nature of working hard if there is opportunity to better ones self and family. These two basics will always defeat socialism.

Productive land can be created, as well. Look at Israel. An arid desert has been turned into a productive oasis. Swamps uh…. wetlands can be drained, water can be dammed, desalinated and pumped, hills can be terraced, fertilizer can be manufactured, dikes can be built, etc. It is governments that prevent this, not that they permit it.

Gary Pearse
December 14, 2019 10:05 pm

I had a private tour of the Ngorongoro Crater game park which is the easternmost of three parks including Masawa to the west of Ngorongoro and Serengeti to the northwest. The trio are within a hundred miles of each other and the protected area is essentially continuous through all three.

Driving from Moshi at the foot of Kilimanjaro to Ngorongoro, passing through Arusha, the area is very thinly populated. Except for scattered small groups of nomadic Massai people with their cows. I didn’t get the impression of human population posing a threat to these remote areas.

Patrick MJD
Reply to  Gary Pearse
December 14, 2019 10:41 pm

To marry in Africa, my wife is Ndebele, costs lots of cows.

StephenP
Reply to  Patrick MJD
December 15, 2019 12:41 am

One problem in Africa AIUI is that wealth is based on the number of cattle, not their condition or productivity leading to overgrazing and environmental degradation. Also masculinity is reflected by the number of children one has.
If a game does show the consequences of decisions then it could help, but as said above it will depend on the designers of the game and their preconceptions.
A similar game on the effect of giving up fossil fuels on people’s lifestyles and the ability of natural resources to achieve the change might show some of the zealots the practicality of their wish lists.

Patrick MJD
Reply to  StephenP
December 15, 2019 1:50 am

Yes, it is a numbers game. It’s why I didn’t “pay” up in “cattle”, refused to. Those who would have received my “payment” would not have been able to support 200 cows (I mean, 200, really?). Maybe I should have written “cows”…but there were certainly costs!

Craig from Oz
December 15, 2019 2:56 am

These people don’t play enough games if they think this is ground breaking.

EternalOptimist
December 15, 2019 4:07 am

Games are great, most are good harmless fun.
But they are models. just models

I served in the military and also played wargames, there is a passing resemblance, but anyone who runs their finances based on a game of monopoly or fights battles based on ‘UP Front’ or plans a city zoning using sim city
is a class 1 industrial scale idiot.

Anyone who looks at the worlds climate through the lens of a model is equally a class 1 industrial scale idiot.

MarkW
Reply to  EternalOptimist
December 15, 2019 8:04 am

In sim city, windmills produce power 100% of the time and never wear out.

December 15, 2019 6:50 am

While companies “game” their way to sustainable technology, some in the financial community with a sharp eye look set to game the rampant “greenwashing” of companies by shorting companies with unnaturally green-inflated investment:

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-global-hedgefunds-sustainable-analysi/villains-or-visionaries-hedge-funds-short-companies-they-say-greenwash-idUSKBN1YJ097

Natalie Gordon
December 15, 2019 9:23 am

I have a blog where I post about the mostly inconsequential events about my mostly inconsequential life. Nonetheless I have a few followers and a few friends. For the last month my posts are daily being liked and I am being invited to follow blogs of a veritable plague of saintly types out to convince me of the way the truth and the light of climate change. They obviously have no interest in me. There seems to be some sort of concerted effort out there to fill all wordpress blogs with their religion of eco alarmism. I fully expect these sincere and earnest followers of the truth to start showing up at my door peddling pamphlets soon.