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Mainstreaming the social sciences in conservation.

TLDR
Mainstreaming the conservation social sciences will facilitate the uptake of the full range of insights and contributions from these fields into conservation policy and practice and enable more ecologically effective and socially just conservation.
Abstract
Despite broad recognition of the value of social sciences and increasingly vocal calls for better engagement with the human element of conservation, the conservation social sciences remain misunderstood and underutilized in practice. The conservation social sciences can provide unique and important contributions to society's understanding of the relationships between humans and nature and to improving conservation practice and outcomes. There are 4 barriers—ideological, institutional, knowledge, and capacity—to meaningful integration of the social sciences into conservation. We provide practical guidance on overcoming these barriers to mainstream the social sciences in conservation science, practice, and policy. Broadly, we recommend fostering knowledge on the scope and contributions of the social sciences to conservation, including social scientists from the inception of interdisciplinary research projects, incorporating social science research and insights during all stages of conservation planning and implementation, building social science capacity at all scales in conservation organizations and agencies, and promoting engagement with the social sciences in and through global conservation policy-influencing organizations. Conservation social scientists, too, need to be willing to engage with natural science knowledge and to communicate insights and recommendations clearly. We urge the conservation community to move beyond superficial engagement with the conservation social sciences. A more inclusive and integrative conservation science—one that includes the natural and social sciences—will enable more ecologically effective and socially just conservation. Better collaboration among social scientists, natural scientists, practitioners, and policy makers will facilitate a renewed and more robust conservation. Mainstreaming the conservation social sciences will facilitate the uptake of the full range of insights and contributions from these fields into conservation policy and practice.

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Are we working towards global research priorities for management and conservation of sea turtles

TL;DR: A systematic review of the peer-reviewed literature (2014 and 2015) attributing papers to the original 20 meta-questions was conducted by as discussed by the authors, who found that significant research is being expended towards global priorities for management and conservation of sea turtles, including reproductive biology, biogeography, population ecology, threats and conservation strategies.
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Navigating the Space between Research and Implementation in Conservation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reconceptualize the gap as a series of crucial, productive spaces in which shared interests, value conflicts, and complex relations between scientists and publics can interact.
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A methodological guide to using and reporting on interviews in conservation science research

TL;DR: This article conducted a structured review of interviews in the context of conservation decision-making and found that researchers are failing to provide a rationale as to why interviews are the most suitable method; not piloting the interviews (thus questions may be poorly designed), not outlining ethical considerations; not providing clear guides to analysis, nor critically reviewing their use of interviews.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Whose Knowledge, Whose nature? Biodiversity, Conservation, and the Political Ecology of Social Movements

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a framework for rethinking the conservation and appropriation of biological diversity from the perspective of social movements, arguing that biodiversity, although with concrete biophysical referents, is a discourse of recent origin.
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What Is Conservation Science

TL;DR: A revised set of core principles in light of the changed global context for conservation is presented in this article. But the authors do not consider the role of humans in the conservation process.
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Social Equity Matters in Payments for Ecosystem Services

TL;DR: It is shown how the equity impacts of PES can create positive and negative feedbacks that influence ecological outcomes, and cautioned against equity-blind PES, which overlooks these relationships as a result of a primary and narrow focus on economic efficiency.
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Conservation means behavior.

TL;DR: It is proposed that conservation is a goal that can only be achieved by changing behavior, and this fundamental link between conservation and behavior has been noted in a number of recent publications.
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