8 research outputs found
Nature based solutions for climate change, people and biodiversity
Published ahead of the COP26 climate change conference in November, 202021, Dr Annalisa Savaresi and colleagues explore nature based solutions for climate change, people and biodiversity, in a briefing paper for the COP26 universities network.This briefing is produced in association with the COP26 Universities Network, a growing group of more than 50 UK-based universities and research institutes working together to help deliver an ambitious outcome at the UN Climate Summit in Glasgow and beyond. The briefing represents the views of its authors (listed on page one) and not necessarily that of every University or institution participating in the network. For more information about the COP26 Universities Network, please contact [email protected]
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Environmental Values Reconsidered: Articulating Conservation and Other More-than-human Relations
Talk of values has become ubiquitous in conservation and, more broadly, in conceptualisations of and discourses about human relations with the living world. The recently released Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) Values Assessment makes the overarching point that the global biodiversity crisis is underlain by narrowly market-based valuations of the natural world (IPBES Secretariat 2022). Its authors call for a broader assessment and inclusion of intrinsic, instrumental and relational values in policymaking (ibid.). Within the conservation community, there has also been a surge in interest in values, as reflected in the growing number of publications that attempt to capture conservationists’ values as well as exploring the role of values in conservation thought and practice (e.g. Manfredo et al. 2017; Vucetich et al. 2021). These studies and policy recommendations fit within the longer-standing field of environmental values – a field which has produced large volumes of scholarship in disciplines as varied as Philosophy, Psychology, Sociology and Economics.
For all its recent success, this growth in academic and policy discourse on values has often suffered from significant conceptual limitations. In many cases, the meaning of the word ‘values’ is contradictory or confused, a point already made (in the context of common speech) by American Pragmatist John Dewey nearly one hundred years ago (Dewey 1939). Recent studies in environmental and conservation values could benefit substantially from a deeper engagement with decades of philosophical work that articulates, clarifies and delineates the various concepts that these studies deploy. Another conspicuous absence in this recent literature is unstructured or semi-structured ethnographic analysis; most studies have used either large-sample quantitative methods, semiquantitative ones such as Q methodology, or ‘snapshot’ qualitative methods like one-off interviews. Yet, as geographers and anthropologists have long known, it is only by paying careful and sustained attention to the cultural, political and ecological realities that shape people’s lives that we can attain a more meaningful understanding of what those people think and feel.
The present thesis is an effort to begin to address these problems and limitations. Its mode of inquiry is threefold: philosophical, quantitative and ethnographic. At times, these methodologies are used in isolation. In other cases, I jointly use philosophy and ethnography to approach a single question; thereby, I hope to go some way toward satisfying recent calls for environmental philosophy to become field-based or at least field-informed (James 2015, 155-156; Norton and Sanbeg 2020). This thesis thereby brings methods and motivations familiar to human and more-than-human geographers – the empirically informed study of social, political and biophysical processes, as they unfold in particular places and at various scales – to bear on the ethical questions that have of late preoccupied biologists, social scientists and policymakers.
In the first research chapter (Chapter 3), I embark on the inevitably bold task of articulating what conservation is. In proposing my own definition, I show that conservation is unintelligible without due consideration of questions of value. I also argue that whether a movement, project or motivation can be considered conservation hinges on the timescale on which value is apprehended. Having proposed an understanding of what conservation is, the next chapter (Chapter 4) draws on responses to a global survey of conservationists to map statistical correlations between conservationists’ values and their personal and professional characteristics. Results demonstrate that factors including where conservationists have worked and their childhood experiences are linked to their values regarding the right roles of people, science, capitalism and nonhuman entities in conservation.
My research then takes a turn from these relatively abstract (Chapter 3) and large-sample (Chapter 4) inquiries toward field-based, contextualised approaches, drawing on several months of ethnographic observation in Chile/Wallmapu as well as forty-one semi-structured interviews (described in Chapters 5 and 6). Combining philosophical reasoning with these empirical sources, in Chapter 7 I show that the recently proposed – and widely used – category of relational values lacks conceptual and practical worth. My argument is that it is not possible to distinguish relational values from more familiar types of values, namely held, instrumental and intrinsic ones. To make matters worse, in attempting to delineate their new category, proponents of relational values have been compelled to silence or downplay the relational qualities in these more familiar types. The final research chapter (Chapter 8) takes an on-the-ground approach to the question of what values do in society: I explore how diverse anthropocentric and non-anthropocentric values have shaped Chile’s recent social uprising and ongoing Constitutional reform (henceforth ‘constituent process’). By disentangling questions of value from notions and practices of rights, I question the conceptual validity and ethical desirability of the constitutional proposal to protect the putative rights of nature – and suggest an alternative based on humans’ rights to conserve their environments. This alternative, despite being based on humans’ rights, can be motivated by non-anthropocentric beliefs as well as anthropocentric ones.
Taken as a whole, this thesis showcases what philosophical and geographical methods can contribute to current attempts to conceptualise more-than-human relations and environmental values. The first two research chapters are fairly constructive: I propose a new articulation of what conservation is and (together with my collaborators) I map statistical correlations between conservationists’ values and their characteristics. It will be interesting to see whether and how new research contextualises my definition in the broader matrix of articulations of what conservation is, as well as what the statistical associations we identify consist of (in other words, what shapes conservationists’ values, and what is shaped by them). The second half of the thesis, generally being more deconstructive, aims to redirect our thinking away from two recently widespread ideas: relational values and the rights of nature. And yet, the need to promote relational and non-anthropocentric thinking is real enough. I therefore encourage philosophers, geographers and others interested in understanding more-than-human relations to consider what new or existing notions might satisfy that need while avoiding the problems I identify with relational values and the rights of nature
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Managing hybridization beyond the natural-anthropogenic dichotomy.
*first paragraph* (abstract not available)
Hybridisation occurs when distinct populations interbreed with one another. Historically, hybrids have lacked recognition in legal conservation frameworks, mainly because they have been perceived as a threat to species’ purity and lacking conservation value (Draper et al. 2021). Twenty years ago, in a landmark paper, Allendorf and colleagues (2001) proposed distinguishing between natural and anthropogenic hybrids and argued for the protection of the former as well as the mitigation and control of the latter. Their justification for this was based on promoting what we here refer to as the evolutionary, biodiversity, ecological, and naturalness values (Table 1), along with the empirical proposition that natural hybrids promote these values whereas anthropogenic hybrids detract from them (Allendorf et al. 2001). The practice of removing anthropogenic hybrids has since been criticised by those who believe that at least some anthropogenic hybrids also ought to be actively conserved, in view of their ecological and evolutionary benefits (Stronen & Paquet 2013; vonHoldt et al. 2018). For example, Cooper and Shaffer (2021) recently found that the anthropogenic hybrids of two tiger salamander species (Ambystoma spp.) can tolerate thermal extremes better and are more resilient in the face of climate change than either of the parent populations
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Human Bycatch: Conservation Surveillance and the Social Implications of Camera Traps
Camera traps are widely used in conservation research and practice. They can capture images of people
(‘human bycatch’), but little is known about how often this happens, or the implications for human rights,
wellbeing, or conservation. We surveyed authors of published ecology and conservation studies that used camera
traps. Over 90 percent of respondents reported that their projects had captured images of people, in most cases
unintentionally. Despite this, images of people were widely used to inform conservation practice, demonstrating
that camera traps are a key tool in emerging regimes of conservation surveillance. Human behaviour caught on
camera included illegal activities and acts of protest. Some respondents reported positive conservation impacts
of human bycatch, for example in law enforcement. However, others reported negative social impacts, such as
infringing privacy and creating fear. We argue that these findings reveal a breach of commitment to do no harm
and could undermine conservation success if they exacerbate conflict. Over 75 percent of respondents reported
objections to or direct interference with camera traps, confirming opposition to their deployment. Many respondents
recognise and take steps to mitigate these issues, but they are rarely discussed in the literature. Policy guidelines
are needed to ensure the use of camera traps is ethically appropriateThe Moran Fun
Human Bycatch: Conservation Surveillance and the Social Implications of Camera Traps
Camera traps are widely used in conservation research and practice. They can capture images of people (‘human bycatch’), but little is known about how often this happens, or the implications for human rights, wellbeing, or conservation. We surveyed authors of published ecology and conservation studies that used camera traps. Over 90 percent of respondents reported that their projects had captured images of people, in most cases unintentionally. Despite this, images of people were widely used to inform conservation practice, demonstrating that camera traps are a key tool in emerging regimes of conservation surveillance. Human behaviour caught on camera included illegal activities and acts of protest. Some respondents reported positive conservation impacts of human bycatch, for example in law enforcement. However, others reported negative social impacts, such as infringing privacy and creating fear. We argue that these findings reveal a breach of commitment to do no harm and could undermine conservation success if they exacerbate conflict. Over 75 percent of respondents reported objections to or direct interference with camera traps, confirming opposition to their deployment. Many respondents recognise and take steps to mitigate these issues, but they are rarely discussed in the literature. Policy guidelines are needed to ensure the use of camera traps is ethically appropriate
Human Bycatch: Conservation Surveillance and the Social Implications of Camera Traps
Camera traps are widely used in conservation research and practice. They can capture images of people
(‘human bycatch’), but little is known about how often this happens, or the implications for human rights,
wellbeing, or conservation. We surveyed authors of published ecology and conservation studies that used camera
traps. Over 90 percent of respondents reported that their projects had captured images of people, in most cases
unintentionally. Despite this, images of people were widely used to inform conservation practice, demonstrating
that camera traps are a key tool in emerging regimes of conservation surveillance. Human behaviour caught on
camera included illegal activities and acts of protest. Some respondents reported positive conservation impacts
of human bycatch, for example in law enforcement. However, others reported negative social impacts, such as
infringing privacy and creating fear. We argue that these findings reveal a breach of commitment to do no harm
and could undermine conservation success if they exacerbate conflict. Over 75 percent of respondents reported
objections to or direct interference with camera traps, confirming opposition to their deployment. Many respondents
recognise and take steps to mitigate these issues, but they are rarely discussed in the literature. Policy guidelines
are needed to ensure the use of camera traps is ethically appropriateThe Moran Fun
Nature based solutions for climate change, people and biodiversity
Published ahead of the COP26 climate change conference in November, 202021, Dr Annalisa Savaresi and colleagues explore nature based solutions for climate change, people and biodiversity, in a briefing paper for the COP26 universities network