Article

A manifesto for predictive conservation

Details

Citation

Travers H, Selinske M, Nuno A, Serban A, Mancini F, Barychka T, Bush E, Rasolofoson RA, Watson JEM & Milner-Gulland EJ (2019) A manifesto for predictive conservation. Biological Conservation, 237, pp. 12-18. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2019.05.059

Abstract
If efforts to tackle biodiversity loss and its impact on human wellbeing are to be successful, conservation must learn from other fields which use predictive methods to foresee shocks and pre-empt their impacts in the face of uncertainty, such as military studies, public health and finance. Despite a long history of using predictive models to understand the dynamics of ecological systems and human disturbance, conservationists do not systematically apply predictive approaches when designing and implementing behavioural interventions. This is an important omission because human behaviour is the underlying cause of current widespread biodiversity loss. Here, we critically assess how predictive approaches can transform the way conservation scientists and practitioners plan for and implement social and behavioural change among people living with wildlife. Our manifesto for predictive conservation recognises that social-ecological systems are dynamic, uncertain and complex, and calls on conservationists to embrace the forward-thinking approach which effective conservation requires.

Keywords
Anticipatory approaches; Problem framing; Intervention framing; Implementation design; Impact evaluation

Journal
Biological Conservation: Volume 237

StatusPublished
FundersUniversity of Oxford
Publication date30/09/2019
Publication date online18/06/2019
Date accepted by journal31/05/2019
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/29797
ISSN0006-3207

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