4.8 Article

Enabling conservation theories of change

Journal

NATURE SUSTAINABILITY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41893-023-01245-y

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Global theories of change can guide conservation and sustainable use of Earth's ecosystems, but translating them into actionable items can be challenging. This study presents a framework for developing ecosystem-specific theories of change that consider feasibility based on national socioeconomic and political contexts. It uses coastal wetlands as a case study and identifies different enabling profiles for conservation actions.
Global theories of change (ToCs) can provide broad, overarching guidance for conservation and sustainable use of Earth's ecosystems. However, broad guidance alone cannot inform how conservation actions will lead to desired socioecological outcomes. Here we develop a framework for translating a global-scale ToC into focused, ecosystem-specific ToCs that consider feasibility of actions, as determined by national socioeconomic and political contexts (that is, enabling conditions). We used coastal wetlands as a case study for developing the framework and identified six distinct multinational profiles of enabling conditions ('enabling profiles') for their conservation. For countries belonging to profiles with high internal capacity to enable conservation, we described plausible ToCs that involved strengthening policy and regulation. Alternatively, for profiles with low internal enabling capacity, plausible ToCs typically required formalizing community-led conservation. Our 'enabling profile' framework can be applied to other ecosystems to help operationalize the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework and meet sustainable development goals. Theories of change have been a staple of sustainability research, but how to connect such overarching concepts to actionable items can be a struggle. This study uses coastal wetlands to demonstrate a potential framework for integrating indicators of conservation enabling conditions into theories of change.

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