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				 A new multi-institutional project, led by a University of 
				Illinois researcher and supported by a $550,000 grant from the 
				John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, will trace key 
				outcomes of $655 million in the foundation’s global conservation 
				investments made over 40 years. 
 “We don’t know that much about the long-term effectiveness of 
				international conservation funding in economically poor but 
				biodiversity-rich developing countries. By looking at four 
				decades of MacArthur investment, we have an excellent 
				opportunity to identify key factors associated with enduring 
				success over time,” says Daniel Miller, principal investigator 
				on the project and assistant professor in the Department of 
				Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences at Illinois.
 
              
                
				 
              
				In this context, success isn’t just about saving a particular 
				species of concern. Instead, the success of a conservation 
				investment is often measured by its durability. For example, an 
				initial investment may fund a research center or training 
				program to continue the work beyond the length of the grant. 
				Indeed, exploratory research by the project team suggests that 
				international conservation funding may be most effective when it 
				strategically invests in capacity-building and sustainable 
				financing, such as trust funds or forestry certification 
				schemes. By looking at 40 years of funding history, the team 
				will be able to tease out even more patterns.
 “MacArthur led the way among private foundations in support for 
				biodiversity. What has their early and, in many cases, 
				long-standing support for conservation led to? Are graduates of 
				MacArthur-funded training programs now employed as leaders in 
				conservation organizations and agencies? And if so, how have 
				their efforts affected threatened species and conservation on 
				the ground? Tracing these outcomes is hugely complex,” Miller 
				says.
 
              
                The research team, including co-principal 
				investigator Jana Diesner from the School of Information 
				Sciences at Illinois, will use methods from data mining, natural 
				language processing, machine learning, and social network 
				analysis to examine the capacity-building and sustainable 
				financing themes from 40 years of project reports. 
              
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			They will also carry out in-depth research in Bhutan, 
			Madagascar, and Peru to learn what worked and what didn’t across 
			these three diverse country contexts.
 “My team is excited to collaborate with this outstanding group of 
			experts to identify the real-world impacts of funding for conserving 
			our world’s natural resources and biodiversity,” Diesner says. “We 
			will contribute our methodological and technical expertise in 
			human-centered data science and mixed-methods research to this joint 
			effort.”
 
 Miller plans to present the findings to private foundations and 
			other donors, as well as scientists contributing to a growing body 
			of literature around the science of philanthropy. But ultimately, 
			his goal is to help investors spend money wisely on programs that 
			actually work over the long term.
 
 “Addressing this knowledge gap is vital given mounting threats to 
			biodiversity and shifts in the conservation funding landscape. 
			Foundations and other private actors are increasingly important in 
			supporting conservation,” he says.
 
 Miller and Diesner will work with Jeremy Brooks from The Ohio State 
			University, Sonam Wangyel Wang from the Bhutan Institute of 
			Himalayan Studies, and Aili Phyälä and Johanna Eklund from the 
			University of Helsinki, as well as an external advisory group.
 
			[Sources: Daniel Miller, Jana DiesnerNews writer: Lauren Quinn]
 
			
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