Wicked! Serious games for Integrated Landscape Management

On a learning mission to São Tomé and Príncipe, we got serious about games to challenge worldviews and create opportunities for dialogue.

Integrated Landscape Management (ILM) demands more than technical solutions — it requires understanding social dynamics, trade-offs, and decision-making tensions.

This is what we explored with BirdLife International and Oikos – Cooperação e Desenvolvimento, by playing Dukunu Mole – Collaborate to Survive during our learning mission to Landscapes For Our Future’s São Tomé and Príncipe project last month.

A wicked game, developed by Claude A. Garcia (CIRAD & ETH Zürich), LEAF and others, Dukunu Mole simulates a contested landscape and offers insights into how communities can collaborate and integrate, essential for small island states like São Tomé and Príncipe, where spatial competition is explicit.  

The role of serious games in landscape management

Serious games challenge worldviews and provide the opportunity for structured dialogue to confront and navigate complex transitions.

They are games built and designed to address ‘wicked problems’. Interest in these serious games for their use in planning and policy-related research and development has been growing for some time.  The designation as ‘wicked’ can be used widely to describe issues of our time, in an era of complexity, these are issues which:

  • are social or cultural in nature
  • involve multiple stakeholders
  • have interconnected factors, making them difficult to define or solve
  • have numerous potential solutions or approaches

Another commonality is that addressing wicked problems will require experimentation, with no ‘free shots’ – every move has consequences, and  there is no definitive formula. The context of wicked problems is thus complex, and the stakes are high; each solution must be adaptive or must invest in an iterative process that fosters a culture of learning.

Sounds like ILM to us.

Revisiting Dukunu Mole

The game paired participants to contemplate the future of the island through four explicit rounds of decision-making. For each 10-year or 10-decade interval, each team is forced to decide how to feed, educate and house a growing population on a finite island with limited resources. There are varied opportunities for income generation, including investing in agriculture, forestry, cocoa production or hunting – each carrying its own risk. The choice to collaborate or move forward alone is up to each team.

Through the sequence of rounds, a few reflections emerged:

🔹 The power of social institutions

Informal community agreements on resource use often regulate landscapes more effectively than formal oversight. In Dukunu Mole, the pressure not to deforest inside the national park was driven more by the strength of social relations with community members and potential fallout than by fines or enforcement by the government.

 🤔  Are we leveraging community-driven governance enough?

🔹 Collaboration vs competition

The game reveals that while short-term gains come from competition, long-term resilience depends on cooperation. As each decade progresses, teams are made to feel how precarious their situations are – one bad hunting season or a limited harvest could unravel decades of progress. In these tight moments, strong relations and resource sharing could mean survival.  

🤔  How can we foster collaboration in real-world landscapes?

🔹 The game ends, the thinking continues

As we progressed round by round, insights and questions emerged. Participants engaged in an open round of dialogue afterwards, debriefing on their reflections and what surprised them about how they had played the game. The consensus was that, during the gameplay, they had strongly felt the need to survive – the game imposes an urgency and scarcity of resources. However, upon reflection, the mental models used by each team to dictate how decisions were made had been more hidden than we had expected – at times, participants themselves had been blind to these and had made instinctual decisions that later surprised them. The game facilitated learning about the system at hand and self-reflection about one’s beliefs, values and decision-making processes.

Summary

The wicked problems of our time – think climate change, poverty, and biodiversity loss – are complex, unpredictable, and shaped by countless interactions with values that are not always local in nature.  Traditional planning and control often fail in these dynamic systems. Instead, we must embrace new paradigms of decision-making. Serious games offer a powerful way to explore future scenarios, challenge assumptions, and test strategies before implementing them in the real world.

Reflection questions

  • How can serious games help us break down barriers to collaboration in landscape management?
  • What informal governance structures exist in our landscapes, and how can we strengthen them?
  • How do we balance competition and cooperation to ensure long-term sustainability?

Find out more about Dukunu Mole and other serious games relevant to landscape management

Playtime! Teaching the pros (and cons)

Our programme's Global Summit brought together more than 50 ILM practitioners to explore the inner workings of an integrated approach to landscapes management. But how to bring everyone to a common understanding of these principles?

A game, of course!

Claude A. Garcia, professor of international forest management, led an unconventional session: a strategy game that simulated the oil palm supply chain in Cameroon. Everybody in the room had to set aside their usual roles and imagine themselves as stakeholders in this landscape, so as to better understand the effects of decisions, values and choices, including economic constraints and consequences, on ecosystems.

The system is complex, and decisions are made at all levels, with far-reaching and often-unforeseen consequences for other people, the economy and the environment.

Claude garcia

The session proved how strategy games such as these can be an innovative approach to help stakeholders better anticipate losses, benefits, and the importance of collective actions.

Critically, these games do not define how to win. Rather, players determine how they wish to act within the common landscape and decide what winning means to them:

  • Collaborate with industry?
  • Form a cooperative group?
  • Collaborate for collective benefit?
  • Dominate the market and prosper?

As we moved through successive growing seasons and the pressure intensified, we were challenged to think about:

  • What guided your choices?
  • What were the common constraints: information, time, resources?
  • What were our emotions, outcomes and turning points?
  • And finally: what were our lessons for an integrated landscapes approach?

The game emphasized painful choices that manifest in the real world – how social dynamics translate to ecological dynamics – and the results were powerful! People with years of experience seemed to reach new conclusions and see things differently, creating an impact that no policy brief or report could have done.

The Centrality of Power

An at-a-glance summary of a session at the global summit that explored the issue of power within Integrated Landscape Management.

One of the sessions at our recent global summit looked at the the issue of power within Integrated Landscape Management. As we know, power dynamics between different groups, including genders, ethnicities, education levels, and professions, significantly impact land use. Here, I summarize the main points from this excellent session.

↔️ These interactions are instrumental in shaping the landscape we see.

⭕️ 𝐀𝐠𝐞𝐧𝐜𝐲⭕️ As landscape actors, we must recognize our own agency and decide whether to address inequality or remain passive observers.

The session explored three key strategies for empowerment.

1️⃣ Identify stakeholders and understand their sources of power, using tools like a power/influence matrix and net-mapping.

⚒ A power/influence matrix is a classic method to sort out actors in a system and associate them to dimensions of both power, interest, and attitude, helping to navigate the complexities of a social system. (Read the paper, Making Sense of Stakeholder Mapping here)

🛠 A method we have been using in across the Landscapes For Our Future program is Net-Mapping. A highly participatory exercise to understand levels of influence and visualize power between actors, helping to diagnose the political landscape. (Read more about Net-Mapping here)

2️⃣ Recognize power disparities and voicelessness.

3️⃣ Enable empowerment through tailored approaches and strategies, including training, safe spaces, alliances, resource access, and rights, such as legal or cultural rights, that have been historically denied (e.g., women’s land rights).

Empowering others means giving them a voice, enhancing visibility, and fostering innovation and diversity. It’s about intentionally creating safe spaces and using spatial leadership to amplify the voices of the marginalized.

❓ A critical question persists: How do we engage powerful actors in discussions about changing the status quo, especially those who may resist such change and stand to lose power?

📓 Read the article, “Power, politics and participation: Naming the non-technical in multi-stakeholder processes” here.

📝 Read the article, “Navigating power imbalances in landscape governance: a network and influence analysis in southern Zambia” here.

From Ridge to Reef

On the island of Mauritius, home to some of the world's most diverse and ecologically important forests and ecosystems, the Ridge to Reef (R2R) project is restoring and increasing native forest cover. In early 2023, members of our Central Component visited on a learning mission.
Tamarin Bay, District of Black River, Mauritius with a view of Rempart Mountain. Photo by Khalil Walji.

Mauritius is famed for its crystal-clear waters and white sandy beaches. This beautiful island is also characterised by a high number of endemic species found nowhere else in the world.

One of the most critical landscapes, and key to the Mauritius from Ridge to Reef (R2R) project, is the Black River Gorges National Park. Covering an area of around 6,500 hectares, the park is home to many of the island’s rarest species, including the Mauritius kestrel, the pink pigeon, and the echo parakeet. In a broader context, Mauritius forms part of the Southwest Indian Ocean Biodiversity Hotspot, in what is known as the Mascarene Archipelago, globally admired for its large numbers of endemic plant and animal species.

Many of these ecosystems are, however, being degraded by deforestation, land-use change, and invasive species, which have seen native forest areas diminish significantly since 1835. At present, they cover only 2% of their previous range, and 89% of endemic flora are considered threatened with extinction.

Who’s who

The responsibility to conserve and expand these globally relevant ecosystems is placed on the shoulders of the team from the National Parks Conservation Services (NPCS), which was established in 1994 to manage the native terrestrial biodiversity of Mauritius and to retain its genetic diversity for future generations.

About R2R

The Mauritius from Ridge to Reef project works in various national parks around the island, including the Black River Gorges National Park (BRNP), Bras D’eau, and Ile Ambre where the project is principally focused on restoring and increasing native forest cover. Here the R2R will focus on the removal of invasive species, the replanting of indigenous and endemic species, and the reforestation of non-forested areas outside the national parks, in the catchment area around the BRNP where state-owned agricultural land is leased to farming communities. These areas are targeted for the expansion of indigenous forest cover through “steppingstones” or connectivity corridors and will require the engagement of farming communities. The project is also targeting mangrove areas immediately surrounding the shores of the island to improve mangrove health to act as a protective shield and buffer against sea-level rise. Healthy mangroves further support the creation of fish nurseries and improve the availability of animal protein and food security for the local population.

What we learned

One of the core activity areas of the Central Component is gathering the knowledge and lessons generated from the implementation of the 22 ILM projects in the programme. With this, we assess where we can support the LFF projects, and identify experiences that might be of use to other projects in the programme (what we call “cross-learning”). 

The NPCS is primarily focused on conservation and restoration within national park boundaries. The ambitions under the R2R project are an expansion of their mandate and intention to work with diverse actors across the island to enhance and to extend their goals. This will require the deployment of mediation, institutional flexibility, and convening capabilities to achieve ILM outcomes. Here is a sample of our findings about the project they lead, centred around the six ‘dimensions’ of ILM we have identified. 

Pictured: Khalil Walji (left) and Kim Geheb (right) give the bee-keeping outputs an earnest thumbs-up.

Stakeholder identification

The project collaborates with several key stakeholders across the landscape including partners in various government ministries, NGOs, and academia. The first event to engage stakeholders in the project was a workshop held during the visit of the Central Component (CC) which provided an overview of project objectives and worked to create a unified common vision for Mauritius. The project does not have a fully-fledged Theory of Change (ToC) to guide project implementation. ToCs are important, because they can help projects to theorise the strategies and approaches that they will use to generate outcomes. For the LFF, outcomes represent behavioural changes: stakeholders do things differently, to support the R2R project’s objectives, and to maximise the value that it brings. To achieve this, all projects need to have a good understanding of the stakeholder landscape, and the relationships between them.

The CC uses an approach called Net-Mapping to map out stakeholders and the dynamics amongst them to inform the creation of a Theory of Change.

Find out more here.


Multi-stakeholder fora (MSF)

An MSF has not been created for the R2R but is acknowledged as necessary for the success of the project, especially given the number of relevant government ministries and project partners. In lieu of creating a new forum, the potential to exploit existing spaces for dialogue is being explored. One promising option is a new Inter-ministerial Forum for Climate Change, which could act as a platform for integration.

A critical aspect of the successful function of an MSF is the skill sets needed to convene, mediate and engage stakeholders. The NPCS team does not at present have this in-house capacity but would seem very keen to bring in these skill sets, as well as look to the project partners, who may be best placed to co-convene and facilitate this forum.


Common vision 

The R2R project did not have a commonly-agreed-upon vision for its landscape. During a one-day workshop with 40+ participants, project stakeholders began to define a common vision for the R2R project. A co-created vision can be immensely powerful as a ‘north star’ behind which project stakeholders and activities can be organized.

Participants were asked to explore their vision for Mauritius 10 years into the future and to consider agricultural, economic, and environmental dimensions. Group discussions were held to further flesh out common challenges to achieve this vision and who needed to work together to arrive at this future state.

A circular blue and green economy in Mauritius that supports linking the environment with livelihoods through:

  • A sustainable and productive agricultural sector that enhances food security and self-sufficiency.
  • Environmental management across all land uses with less waste and more renewable energy.
  • A diversified economy that operates within biophysical boundaries and supports equity and better lives for all.
  • Harmonization of policies and legislation with better enforcement and supporting greater awareness, inclusion, and empowerment of people in decision-making for environmental outcomes.”

– The proposed vision for Mauritius, which emerged from the workshop.
(This vision was not endorsed and is presented as a working draft.)

👉 Explore the post ‘6 Ingredients to ILM’, which features the key aspects of defining a common vision.


Institutionalization 

The NPCS and R2R is well institutionalized into the Mauritian government, given their role as service under the Ministry of Agro-Industry and Food Security. Although they are well placed, the creation of an MSF should also be developed with sustainability in mind, to ensure it serves as a common space for dialogue for the R2R, but beyond it as well.


Iterative and adaptive management

It is early days for the project, but the NPCS team’s experience suggests that it has well-established systems to monitor project interventions and progress. How these systems are used in the iterative and adaptive management of the programme is less clear. The CC suggested these areas should be prioritized through annual technical and steering committee meetings, as well as prioritizing the monitoring and feedback to enable the team to course-correct where necessary.


Technical solutions and tools

The project’s knowledge of its biophysical and ecosystem conditions is high. Its in-house and project-based systems for monitoring these trends are well established, although they indicated the need for increased capacity, and systems that can be better used for adaptive and iterative management and to generate evidence to inform policy at higher levels.