dc.description.abstract | Animal recording is an interactive process that involves several practices. The efficiency of the process
is essential to ensure the utility of outcomes necessary for sustainable participation. Most evaluation
approaches define efficiency in economic terms. Animal recording systems lack outputs of direct
economic benefits; hence, efficiency evaluation based on utility derived from the records would be
more laudable. In that case, a system is considered efficient when outcome-utility-dependent participation
is sustained. Approaches for evaluating efficiency based on the utility of outputs are, however,
unavailable. The current study presents an approach for evaluating the efficiency of animal recording
based on output utility using the institutional analysis and development framework. The approach
evaluates efficiency by incorporating institutional issues influencing the operations of the system and
its outcomes. It considers animal recording as an action arena with various actors in three action
situations, namely: animal identification and registration, pedigree and performance recording and
animal evaluation and information utilization. The variables include the positions occupied by actors,
their actions, the outcomes associated with the actions, the level of control over choice, available
information and the cost and benefits of engagement. As an interactive process, animal recording has
rules that order relationships between actors. It also exists within a biophysical system and community
whose attributes, combined with the rules, influence the actions and outcomes of recording. These are
evaluated by looking at rule formation structures, enforcement and compliance and the level of
interaction between the recording system and other biophysical characteristics and the community for
their effects on outcomes, their utility and sustainability of recording. Participatory tools, Stakeholder
matrix and Venn diagrams are used to identify the variables, quantify their interactions and link them
to outputs. The applicability of the approach is tested using a case where information systems are
imperfect. The approach successfully identifies missing actors within the action arena, poor rule
conformance due to weak enforcement agencies and the absence of rules that govern outcomes and
ensure the utility of outcomes as hindrances to the utility of recording and hence the efficiency of the
system. It may therefore be used to evaluate the efficiency of systems whose outputs do not have a
direct market value and in situations where quantitative market information is scarce. | en_US |