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The global conservation movement is diverse but not divided

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Fisher, JA 
Luque-Lora, R 

Abstract

Biodiversity is being lost at an unprecedented rate, making the conservation movement of critical importance for life on Earth. However, recent debates over the future of conservation have been polarised, acrimonious and dominated by an unrepresentative demographic group. The views of the wider global conservation community on fundamental questions regarding what, why and how to conserve are unknown. Here we characterise the views of 9,264 conservationists from 149 countries, identifying specific areas of consensus and disagreement, and three independent dimensions of conservation thinking. The first two dimensions (‘people-centred conservation’ and ‘science-led ecocentrism’) have widespread support, whereas ‘conservation through capitalism’ is more contentious. While conservationists’ views on these three dimensions do not fall into distinct clusters, there are clear relationships between dimension scores and respondents’ gender, age, educational background, career stage and continent of nationality. Future debates and policy processes should focus on the most contentious issues, and do more to include the perspectives of under-represented groups in conservation who may not share the views of those in more powerful positions.

Description

Keywords

4101 Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation, 41 Environmental Sciences, 15 Life on Land

Journal Title

Nature Sustainability

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2398-9629
2398-9629

Volume Title

2

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Rights

All rights reserved