4.7 Article

Just preservation

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
Volume 229, Issue -, Pages 134-141

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2018.11.018

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Funding

  1. University of Wisconsin Madison

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We are failing to protect the biosphere. Novel views of conservation, preservation, and sustainability are surfacing in the wake of consensus about our failures to prevent extinction or slow climate change. We argue that the interests and well-being of non-humans, youth, and future generations of both human and non-human beings (futurity) have too long been ignored in consensus-based, anthropocentric conservation. Consensus-based stakeholder-driven processes disadvantage those absent or without a voice and allow current adult humans and narrow, exploitative interests to dominate decisions about the use of nature over its preservation for futurity of all life. We propose that authentically non-anthropocentric worldviews that incorporate multispecies justice are needed for a legitimate, deliberative, and truly democratic process of adjudication between competing interests in balancing the preservation and use of nature. Legitimate arenas for such adjudication would be courts that can defend intergenerational equity, which is envisioned by many nations' constitutions, and can consider current and future generations of non-human life. We urge practitioners and scholars to disavow implicit anthropocentric value judgments in their work - or make these transparent and explicit - and embrace a more comprehensive worldview that grants future life on earth fair representation in humanity's decisions and actions today.

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