Eyster Harold N, Gould Rachelle K, Chan Kai M A, Satterfield Terre
Gund Institute for Environment, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont, USA.
The Nature Conservancy, Boulder, Colorado, USA.
Conserv Biol. 2025 Apr;39(2):e14461. doi: 10.1111/cobi.14461.
Social sciences are increasingly recognized as useful for reorienting human action toward environmental conservation. Fully realizing the social sciences' potential requires applying social science methods to conservation challenges and drawing from and building on human action theories from across the social sciences to better understand how and when actions can realize positive social and environmental priorities. We conducted an in-depth analysis of a bounded, systematically selected set of conservation science peer-reviewed articles to investigate the prevalence of social science theories of human action in conservation research and whether these theories represent the richness of the social science literature related to human action. We censused papers published in 2023 in Conservation Biology, Conservation Letters, and Biological Conservation and assessed each paper's geographic scope, social science engagement, whether it investigated human action, and weather it explicitly used human action theories and underlying metatheory (i.e., ways of understanding the world and how one gains knowledge of it). Results across 533 papers showed that 32% of papers incorporated social science and that 64% of these social science papers investigated human action. Twenty-seven percent of these human action papers used explicit human action theories. The theory of planned behavior was the most used explicit theory (17% of action theory papers). The independent self metatheory was the most prevalent; it underlies the theory of planned behavior and focuses on understanding how personal attributes, such as values, shape intentional individual behavior. The prevalence of a few theories and metatheories in these dominant conservation journals may indicate a limited capacity for conservation research to build on previous research, avoid redundant reinvention, and unmask novel applications of social science theory that could reorient human action toward conservation. Human action theory use in conservation might be broadened by changing attitudes on the importance of human action theories for research; incorporating social theory in conservation education; asking reviewers to comment on theory usage and mandating theory reporting; creating spaces for social scientists and theory scholars; providing social scientists and theorists with decision-making power in organizations; rewarding theory use; recognizing feedback loops among theory use; and replacing colonial and capitalistic approaches to conservation.
社会科学在引导人类行为以实现环境保护方面的作用日益得到认可。要充分发挥社会科学的潜力,需要将社会科学方法应用于保护挑战,并借鉴和基于社会科学各领域的人类行为理论,以更好地理解行为如何以及何时能够实现积极的社会和环境目标。我们对一组经过系统挑选的、有一定范围的保护科学同行评议文章进行了深入分析,以调查保护研究中人类行为社会科学理论的流行程度,以及这些理论是否体现了与人类行为相关的社会科学文献的丰富性。我们普查了2023年发表在《保护生物学》《保护通讯》和《生物保护》上的论文,并评估了每篇论文的地理范围、社会科学参与度、是否研究了人类行为,以及是否明确使用了人类行为理论和基础元理论(即理解世界的方式以及获取相关知识的途径)。对533篇论文的分析结果显示,32%的论文纳入了社会科学内容,其中64%的社会科学论文研究了人类行为。这些研究人类行为的论文中有27%使用了明确的人类行为理论。计划行为理论是使用最多的明确理论(占行为理论论文的17%)。独立自我元理论最为普遍;它是计划行为理论的基础,侧重于理解个人属性(如价值观)如何塑造个体的意向行为。在这些主流保护期刊中,少数理论和元理论的流行可能表明保护研究在借鉴以往研究、避免重复发明以及揭示社会科学理论的新应用(这些新应用可引导人类行为实现保护目标)方面的能力有限。通过改变对人类行为理论在研究中的重要性的态度;将社会理论纳入保护教育;要求审稿人对理论使用情况进行评论并规定理论报告要求;为社会科学家和理论学者创造交流空间;赋予社会科学家和理论家在组织中的决策权;奖励理论使用;认识到理论使用中的反馈循环;以及取代保护中的殖民主义和资本主义方法等方式,或许可以拓宽保护领域中人类行为理论的应用范围。