Future oriented conservation: knowledge governance, uncertainty and learning

Carina Wyborn, Lorrae Van Kerkhoff, Michael Dunlop, Nigel Dudley, Oscar Guevara

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Despite significant progress in understanding climate risks, adaptation efforts in biodiversity conservation remain limited. Adaptation requires addressing immediate conservation threats while also attending to long term, highly uncertain and potentially transformative future changes. To date, conservation research has focused more on projecting climate impacts and identifying possible strategies, rather than understanding how governance enables or constrains adaptation actions. We outline an approach to future oriented conservation that combines the capacities to anticipate future ecological change; to understand the implications of that change for social, political and ecological values; and the ability to engage with the governance (and politics) of adaptation. Our approach builds on the adaptive management and governance literature, however we explicitly address the (often contested) rules, knowledge and values that enable or constrain adaptation. We call for a broader focus that extends beyond technical approaches to acknowledge the sociopolitical challenges inherent to adaptation. More importantly, we suggest that conservation policy makers and practitioners can use this approach to facilitate learning and adaptation in the context of complexity, transformational change and uncertainty.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1401-1408
    JournalBiodiversity and Conservation
    Volume25
    Issue number7
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2016

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