Pienkowski Thomas, Kiik Laur, Catalano Allison, Hazenbosch Mirjam, Izquierdo-Tort Santiago, Khanyari Munib, Kutty Roshni, Martins Claudia, Nash Fleur, Saif Omar, Sandbrook Chris
Interdisciplinary Centre for Conservation Science, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Centre for Environmental Policy, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Conserv Biol. 2023 Apr;37(2):e14022. doi: 10.1111/cobi.14022. Epub 2023 Feb 20.
When deciding how to conserve biodiversity, practitioners navigate diverse missions, sometimes conflicting approaches, and uncertain trade-offs. These choices are based not only on evidence, funders' priorities, stakeholders' interests, and policies, but also on practitioners' personal experiences, backgrounds, and values. Calls for greater reflexivity-an individual or group's ability to examine themselves in relation to their actions and interactions with others-have appeared in the conservation science literature. But what role does reflexivity play in conservation practice? We explored how self-reflection can shape how individuals and groups conserve nature. To provide examples of reflexivity in conservation practice, we conducted a year-long series of workshop discussions and online exchanges. During these, we examined cases from the peer-reviewed and gray literature, our own experiences, and conversations with 10 experts. Reflexivity among practitioners spanned individual and collective levels and informal and formal settings. Reflexivity also encompassed diverse themes, including practitioners' values, emotional struggles, social identities, training, cultural backgrounds, and experiences of success and failure. Reflexive processes also have limitations, dangers, and costs. Informal and institutionalized reflexivity requires allocation of limited time and resources, can be hard to put into practice, and alone cannot solve conservation challenges. Yet, when intentionally undertaken, reflexive processes might be integrated into adaptive management cycles at multiple points, helping conservation practitioners better reach their goals. Reflexivity could also play a more transformative role in conservation by motivating practitioners to reevaluate their goals and methods entirely. Reflexivity might help the conservation movement imagine and thus work toward a better world for wildlife, people, and the conservation sector itself.
在决定如何保护生物多样性时,从业者要应对各种各样的使命、有时相互冲突的方法以及不确定的权衡取舍。这些选择不仅基于证据、资助者的优先事项、利益相关者的利益和政策,还基于从业者的个人经历、背景和价值观。保护科学文献中出现了要求增强反思性的呼声,反思性是指个人或群体审视自身及其与他人的行动和互动的能力。但反思性在保护实践中发挥着什么作用呢?我们探讨了自我反思如何塑造个人和群体保护自然的方式。为了提供保护实践中反思性的实例,我们进行了为期一年的一系列研讨会讨论和在线交流。在此期间,我们研究了同行评审文献和灰色文献中的案例、我们自己的经历以及与10位专家的对话。从业者的反思性涵盖个人和集体层面以及非正式和正式场合。反思性还包括各种主题,包括从业者的价值观、情感挣扎、社会身份、培训、文化背景以及成功和失败的经历。反思过程也有局限性、风险和成本。非正式和制度化的反思需要分配有限的时间和资源,可能难以付诸实践,而且仅凭它无法解决保护挑战。然而,当有意进行时,反思过程可以在多个点融入适应性管理周期中,可以帮助保护从业者更好地实现他们的目标。反思性还可能通过激励从业者全面重新评估他们的目标和方法,在保护中发挥更具变革性的作用。反思性可能有助于保护运动设想并因此朝着为野生动物、人类和保护部门本身创造一个更美好的世界而努力。