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The social implications of using drones for biodiversity conservation.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Abstract

Unmanned aerial vehicles, or 'drones', appear to offer a flexible, accurate and affordable solution to some of the technical challenges of nature conservation monitoring and law enforcement. However, little attention has been given to their possible social impacts. In this paper, I review the possible social impacts of using drones for conservation, including on safety, privacy, psychological wellbeing, data security and the wider understanding of conservation problems. I argue that negative social impacts are probable under some circumstances and should be of concern for conservation for two reasons: (1) because conservation should follow good ethical practice; and (2) because negative social impacts could undermine conservation effectiveness in the long term. The paper concludes with a call for empirical research to establish whether the identified social risks of drones occur in reality and how they could be mitigated, and for self-regulation of drone use by the conservation sector to ensure good ethical practice and minimise the risk of unintended consequences.

Description

Keywords

Biodiversity conservation, Drones, Ethics, Political ecology, Social impacts, UAVs, Aircraft, Biodiversity, Computer Security, Conservation of Natural Resources, Politics, Privacy, Safety

Journal Title

Ambio

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0044-7447
1654-7209

Volume Title

44 Suppl 4

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC