4.6 Article

Typifying conservation practitioners' views on the role of education

期刊

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
卷 36, 期 4, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13893

关键词

conservation educators; conservation social sciences; environmental education; evaluation; Madagascar; organizations; outcomes; theory of change; ciencias sociales de la conservacion; educacion ambiental; educadores de la conservacion; evaluacion; Madagascar; organizaciones; resultados; teoria del cambio

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Education plays a crucial role in enhancing human-environment relationships in conservation efforts. This research conducted interviews with practitioners from 15 conservation organizations in Madagascar to explore the assumptions and pathways of change associated with education. The findings reveal that education can drive change through increasing knowledge, emotional connections, cultural practices, leadership development, outcome diversification, and community and societal influence.
Education is an established tool to enhance human-environment relationships, despite the lack of empirical evidence to support its use. We used theories of change to unpack assumptions about the role of education in conservation. We interviewed practitioners from 15 conservation organizations in Madagascar to typify implicit pathways of change and assess whether emerging pathways echo theoretical advances. Five pathways were drivers of change: increasing knowledge, changing emotional connection and changing traditional cultural practices, fostering leaders, diversifying outcomes, and influencing community and society. These pathways reflect existing sociopsychological theories on learning and behavioral change. Most interviewees' organizations had a predominant pathway that was often combined with elements from other pathways. Most pathways lacked culturally grounded approaches. Our research reveals assumptions about the role of education in conservation and indicates that organizations had different ideas of how change happens. The diversity of practices reflects the complexity of factors that influence behavior. Whether this diversity is driven by local sociocultural context, interaction with other conservation approaches, or contingencies remains unclear. Yet, typifying the pathways of change and reflecting on them is the first step towards comprehensive evaluation of when and which pathways and interactions to promote.

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