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Conservation and the social sciences: beyond critique and co‐optation. A case study from orangutan conservation

Conservation and the social sciences: beyond critique and co‐optation. A case study from orangutan conservation
Conservation and the social sciences: beyond critique and co‐optation. A case study from orangutan conservation
1. Interactions between conservation and the social sciences are frequently characterized by either critique (of conservation by social scientists) or co-optation (of social scientific methods and insights by conservationists).

2. This article seeks to push beyond these two dominant positions by exploring how conservationists and social scientists can engage in mutually transformative dialogue. Jointly authored by conservation scientists and social scientists, it uses the global nexus of orangutan conservation as a lens onto current challenges and possibilities facing the conservation–social science relationship.

3. We begin with a cross-disciplinary overview of recent developments in orangutan conservation—particularly those concerned with its social, political and other human dimensions.

4. The article then undertakes a synthetic analysis of key challenges in orangutan conservation—working across difference, juggling scales and contexts and dealing with politics and political economy—and links them to analogous concerns in the conservation–social science relationship.

5. Finally, we identify some ways by which orangutan conservation specifically, and the conservation–social science relationship more generally, can move forward: through careful use of proxies as bridging devices, through the creation of new, shared spaces, and through a willingness to destabilize and overhaul status quos. This demands an open-ended, unavoidably political commitment to critical reflexivity and self-transformation on the part of both conservationists and social scientists.
2575-8314
42–60
Chua, Liana
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Harrison, Mark E.
062cf07f-114a-45dd-ae73-af8f6d65d3e4
Fair, Hannah
ac8ce812-836e-4032-900e-b767a775bac1
Milne, Sol
b517d57e-a03e-4318-8d58-99bb69f31c05
Palmer, Alexandra
b94df2bc-a687-4950-b843-8733a2e9bf8b
Rubis, June
98ae2adb-c400-4dc7-a36c-d5656a2f02b8
Thung, Paul
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Wich, Serge
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Büscher, Bram
9a49487b-29ac-4919-867b-61ee2cc43768
Cheyne, Susan M.
a5e30723-7386-4f40-91cd-6394663d1245
Puri, Rajindra K.
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Schreer, Viola
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Stępień, Anna
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Meijaard, Erik
269089a7-5bc4-450e-a628-7e9e9db7ad6c
Molnar, Zsolt
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Chua, Liana
6f4d6392-79cf-4d2e-b9a9-c7b6feb2f7f2
Harrison, Mark E.
062cf07f-114a-45dd-ae73-af8f6d65d3e4
Fair, Hannah
ac8ce812-836e-4032-900e-b767a775bac1
Milne, Sol
b517d57e-a03e-4318-8d58-99bb69f31c05
Palmer, Alexandra
b94df2bc-a687-4950-b843-8733a2e9bf8b
Rubis, June
98ae2adb-c400-4dc7-a36c-d5656a2f02b8
Thung, Paul
c8a233e4-1470-4e63-a43b-454c421e83e7
Wich, Serge
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Büscher, Bram
9a49487b-29ac-4919-867b-61ee2cc43768
Cheyne, Susan M.
a5e30723-7386-4f40-91cd-6394663d1245
Puri, Rajindra K.
056506f1-4c2d-42bc-a274-574f96c32c56
Schreer, Viola
2b4bf434-8e83-47e8-9787-2b08909d1645
Stępień, Anna
5fa58394-8506-4f41-837b-1f76f8750079
Meijaard, Erik
269089a7-5bc4-450e-a628-7e9e9db7ad6c
Molnar, Zsolt
303669b9-d554-4f51-8350-1c073a60bb22

Chua, Liana, Harrison, Mark E., Fair, Hannah, Milne, Sol, Palmer, Alexandra, Rubis, June, Thung, Paul, Wich, Serge, Büscher, Bram, Cheyne, Susan M., Puri, Rajindra K., Schreer, Viola, Stępień, Anna and Meijaard, Erik , Molnar, Zsolt (ed.) (2020) Conservation and the social sciences: beyond critique and co‐optation. A case study from orangutan conservation. People and Nature, 20 (2), 42–60. (doi:10.1002/pan3.10072).

Record type: Article

Abstract

1. Interactions between conservation and the social sciences are frequently characterized by either critique (of conservation by social scientists) or co-optation (of social scientific methods and insights by conservationists).

2. This article seeks to push beyond these two dominant positions by exploring how conservationists and social scientists can engage in mutually transformative dialogue. Jointly authored by conservation scientists and social scientists, it uses the global nexus of orangutan conservation as a lens onto current challenges and possibilities facing the conservation–social science relationship.

3. We begin with a cross-disciplinary overview of recent developments in orangutan conservation—particularly those concerned with its social, political and other human dimensions.

4. The article then undertakes a synthetic analysis of key challenges in orangutan conservation—working across difference, juggling scales and contexts and dealing with politics and political economy—and links them to analogous concerns in the conservation–social science relationship.

5. Finally, we identify some ways by which orangutan conservation specifically, and the conservation–social science relationship more generally, can move forward: through careful use of proxies as bridging devices, through the creation of new, shared spaces, and through a willingness to destabilize and overhaul status quos. This demands an open-ended, unavoidably political commitment to critical reflexivity and self-transformation on the part of both conservationists and social scientists.

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More information

Published date: March 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 494675
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494675
ISSN: 2575-8314
PURE UUID: 4a07f20b-69c9-4be7-b455-953f08d4d1c8
ORCID for Hannah Fair: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1758-778X

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Date deposited: 11 Oct 2024 17:11
Last modified: 04 Dec 2024 03:26

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Contributors

Author: Liana Chua
Author: Mark E. Harrison
Author: Hannah Fair ORCID iD
Author: Sol Milne
Author: Alexandra Palmer
Author: June Rubis
Author: Paul Thung
Author: Serge Wich
Author: Bram Büscher
Author: Susan M. Cheyne
Author: Rajindra K. Puri
Author: Viola Schreer
Author: Anna Stępień
Author: Erik Meijaard
Editor: Zsolt Molnar

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