4.6 Article

Strengthening conservation science as a crisis discipline by addressing challenges of precaution, privilege, and individualism

Journal

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 6, Pages 1738-1746

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13809

Keywords

conservation policy; disciplinary privilege; individualism; power in science; precautionary principle

Funding

  1. ESRC [ES/R008884/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The article discusses key drivers and effects of resistance to precautionary measures in conservation science, including a loss of rigor under uncertainty, erosion of crisis response capabilities, and further reinforcement of privileged interests in conservation politics. The authors recommend measures to resist competitive individualism and shift towards more egalitarian transdisciplinarity to accelerate advances in conservation science.
Conservation science deals with crises and supports policy interventions devised to mitigate highly uncertain threats that pose irreversible harm. When conventional policy tools, such as quantitative risk assessments, are insufficient, the precautionary principle provides a practical framework and range of robust heuristics. Yet, precaution is often resisted in many policy arenas, especially those involving powerful self-interests, and this resistance is compounded by structures of privilege and competitive individualism in science. We describe key drivers and effects of such resistance in conservation science. These include a loss of rigor under uncertainty, an erosion of crisis response capabilities, and a further reinforcement of privileged interests in conservation politics. We recommend open acknowledgement of the pressures exerted by power inside science; greater recognition for the value of the precautionary principle under uncertainty; deliberate measures to resist competitive individualism; support for blind review, open science, and data sharing; and a shift from hierarchical multidisciplinarity toward more egalitarian transdisciplinarity to accelerate advances in conservation science. Article impact statement: Precautionary principle, privilege structures among disciplines, and culture of individualism link to effective conservation policy making.

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