Statements A and B are correct: involving communities improves relevance and ownership, and participatory methods allow local knowledge to inform planning. Statements C and D are incorrect because one-way information after decisions and neglect of capacity building both undermine effective participation. Thus, the combination A and B only is correct.
Option A:
Option A is incomplete since it omits B, which rightly emphasises the role of local knowledge in participatory planning. Without B, the knowledge dimension of participation is not captured.
Option B:
Option B is correct because it identifies the two statements that reflect genuine participatory practice and excludes C and D, which describe top-down or capacity-blind approaches. It aligns with the unitβs focus on community-based environmental management.
Option C:
Option C is incorrect as it adds C, accepting the idea that communities should be informed only after decisions, which contradicts participatory principles.
Option D:
Option D is incorrect because it combines B, C and D and treats both C and D as correct, disregarding the importance of early involvement and capacity building.
Comment Your Answer
Please login to comment your answer.
Sign In
Sign Up
Answers commented by others
No answers commented yet. Be the first to comment!