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Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
April 2020
Print publication year:
2020
Online ISBN:
9781108638210
Creative Commons:
Creative Common License - CC Creative Common License - BY Creative Common License - NC Creative Common License - ND
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/creativelicenses

Book description

Conservation research is essential for advancing knowledge but to make an impact scientific evidence must influence conservation policies, decision making and practice. This raises a multitude of challenges. How should evidence be collated and presented to policymakers to maximise its impact? How can effective collaboration between conservation scientists and decision-makers be established? How can the resulting messages be communicated to bring about change? Emerging from a successful international symposium organised by the British Ecological Society and the Cambridge Conservation Initiative, this is the first book to practically address these questions across a wide range of conservation topics. Well-renowned experts guide readers through global case studies and their own experiences. A must-read for practitioners, researchers, graduate students and policymakers wishing to enhance the prospect of their work 'making a difference'. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

Reviews

'Conservation Research, Policy and Practice is an excellent handbook on how to conduct research in conservation and then translate it into an impactful outcome. It explores the complexity of horizon scanning and interacting with policy, while providing clear guidance on how to develop a Theory of Change. With an increasingly greater focus on evidence-informed policy and practice, researchers need concrete examples on how to generate and synthesise research findings, and then to communicate these findings to decision-makers; all while recognising that a degree of uncertainty is inherent to all policy-making. This book will aid anyone wishing for their research to have an impact, particularly in conservation but also any interdisciplinary pursuit.'

Dr Grant Hill-Cawthorne - Head of the Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology

'Conservation practitioners, policy makers and researchers alike will find much to interest them in this excellent book. Ecological systems are complex and sometimes unpredictable so the more clues we have to how a particular conservation management intervention might play out in the real world the greater likelihood of achieving the outcomes we are looking for. Too often, proposals for conserving a species, habitat or ecosystem are subject to confirmation bias, erroneous assumptions and flimsy evidence bases. This book challenges conservationists not only to do better but equips them with the tools to do so. It is an important contribution to the urgent planetary need to address nature’s decline and loss.'

Jonathan Hughes - Chief Executive Officer, WCMC, UN Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre

'In the Anthropocene, with the dual biodiversity and climate crises, it is imperative that conservation research results have impact. This matters to researchers, to research funders, to society and to our planet. This book illustrates that while research evidence is essential, it is only part of the mix needed to deliver impact through influencing policy, practice, and societal change. Getting evidence used involves a complex interplay between those that gather it and those that develop and implement policy, or otherwise change their practices. This requires a range of different approaches and communication techniques, and the development of strong and trusting collaborative relationships with relevant stakeholders. While there is no panacea, there are some general principles. This excellent and timely book provides a valuable tool that illustrates those principles, providing examples from a broad diversity of experience and situations.'

Debbie Pain - Honorary Professor, School of Biological Sciences, University of East Anglia and Honorary Research Fellow, Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge

‘... this book emphasizes how close working relationships among scientists, policy makers, and practitioners are increasingly critical to fulfilling conservation goals and to broadening the impacts of societal benefits. This compilation of case studies and opinion pieces provides a valuable resource for conservation researcher’s intent on engaging with both policy and practice.'

R. A. Delgado Jr. Source: Choice

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Contents

Full book PDF

Page 1 of 2


  • Conservation Research, Policy and Practice
    pp i-ii
  • Ecological Reviews - Series page
    pp iii-iv
  • Conservation Research, Policy and Practice - Title page
    pp v-v
  • Copyright page
    pp vi-vi
  • Contents
    pp vii-ix
  • Contributors
    pp x-xvi
  • Introduction and scene setting
    pp 1-26
  • Chapter Two - Working in government: conservation research, policy and practice
    pp 9-26
  • Part I - Identifying priorities and collating the evidence
    pp 27-142
  • Part II - Influencing and making decisions
    pp 143-262
  • Chapter Eleven - Conservation decisions in the face of uncertainty
    pp 183-195
  • Part III - Communicating the message
    pp 263-322
  • Chapter Seventeen - Campaigning to bring about change
    pp 277-292
  • Chapter Eighteen - Behavioural insights for conservation and sustainability
    pp 293-308
  • Conclusion
    pp 323-328

Page 1 of 2


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