Science, Power, and System Dynamics: the Political Economy of Conservation Biology
- 3 August 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Conservation Biology
- Vol. 15 (4) , 980-989
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1523-1739.2001.015004980.x
Abstract
Frustration with the lack of action on conservation issues by governments has sparked debate around the policy role of conservation biologists. We analyzed the political economy of conservation biology, that is, of the dynamics of the political and economic structures within which conservation biology operates, and we suggest more productive means for conservation biologists to achieve conservation goals. Within the modern state, conservation goals are marginalized because the growth needs of industrial capital have the highest priority. Environmental advocacy within this system largely addresses only proximate concerns and has limited success. Science is a product of modern society, but scientists now need to foster novel institutional arrangements in which humans can function within the limits of natural systems. This entails a larger recognition of the inherent contradictions residing within current institutions that themselves depend on unsustainably high resource flows. As one critical counterbalance to these institutions, we discuss community‐based management and research as primary institutions through which sustainable use of natural resources might be achieved.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- TRADITIONAL ECOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE AND WISDOM OF ABORIGINAL PEOPLES IN BRITISH COLUMBIAEcological Applications, 2000
- Conservation Science and Public Policy: Only the BeginningConservation Biology, 1999
- Sustainable Harvest for ConservationConservation Biology, 1999
- Ecological economics and political ecology: towards a necessary synthesisEcological Economics, 1999
- Conservation Biology: Into the MillenniumConservation Biology, 1998
- Reflections on “What is Ecosystem Management?”Conservation Biology, 1997
- Tons, joules, and money: Modes of production and their sustainability problemsSociety & Natural Resources, 1997
- Representing Uncertainty in Global Climate Change Science and Policy: Boundary-Ordering Devices and AuthorityScience, Technology, & Human Values, 1996
- A Science for Survival: Values and Conservation BiologyConservation Biology, 1996
- Nature's advocates: putting science to work in environmental organisationsPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1996