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The major barriers to evidence-informed conservation policy and possible solutions.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

Rose, David C 
Sutherland, William J 
González-Varo, Juan P 
Robertson, Rebecca J 

Abstract

Conservation policy decisions can suffer from a lack of evidence, hindering effective decision-making. In nature conservation, studies investigating why policy is often not evidence-informed have tended to focus on Western democracies, with relatively small samples. To understand global variation and challenges better, we established a global survey aimed at identifying top barriers and solutions to the use of conservation science in policy. This obtained the views of 758 people in policy, practice, and research positions from 68 countries across six languages. Here we show that, contrary to popular belief, there is agreement between groups about how to incorporate conservation science into policy, and there is thus room for optimism. Barriers related to the low priority of conservation were considered to be important, while mainstreaming conservation was proposed as a key solution. Therefore, priorities should focus on convincing the public of the importance of conservation as an issue, which will then influence policy-makers to adopt pro-environmental long-term policies.

Description

Keywords

conservation policy, evidence‐based conservation, evidence‐informed conservation, knowledge exchange, political science, science communication, science‐policy

Journal Title

Conserv Lett

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1755-263X
1755-263X

Volume Title

11

Publisher

Wiley
Sponsorship
NERC (1653183)
Grantham Foundation for the Protection of the Environment
Kenneth Miller Trust (unknown)
NERC (1653183)
NERC (NE/L002507/1)
European Commission (308454)