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Equity trade-offs in conservation decision making

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Version 2 2024-06-05, 09:10
Version 1 2020-07-15, 09:43
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-05, 09:10 authored by EA Law, NJ Bennett, CD Ives, R Friedman, KJ Davis, Carla ArchibaldCarla Archibald, KA Wilson
Conservation decisions increasingly involve multiple environmental and social objectives, which result in complex decision contexts with high potential for trade-offs. Improving social equity is one such objective that is often considered an enabler of successful outcomes and a virtuous ideal in itself. Despite its idealized importance in conservation policy, social equity is often highly simplified or ill-defined and is applied uncritically. What constitutes equitable outcomes and processes is highly normative and subject to ethical deliberation. Different ethical frameworks may lead to different conceptions of equity through alternative perspectives of what is good or right. This can lead to different and potentially conflicting equity objectives in practice. We promote a more transparent, nuanced, and pluralistic conceptualization of equity in conservation decision making that particularly recognizes where multidimensional equity objectives may conflict. To help identify and mitigate ethical conflicts and avoid cases of good intentions producing bad outcomes, we encourage a more analytical incorporation of equity into conservation decision making particularly during mechanistic integration of equity objectives. We recommend that in conservation planning motivations and objectives for equity be made explicit within the problem context, methods used to incorporate equity objectives be applied with respect to stated objectives, and, should objectives dictate, evaluation of equity outcomes and adaptation of strategies be employed during policy implementation.

History

Journal

Conservation biology

Volume

32

Pagination

294-303

Location

Chichester, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0888-8892

eISSN

1523-1739

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

2

Publisher

Wiley

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