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Dodo dilemmas: conflicting ethical loyalties in conservation social science research

Dodo dilemmas: conflicting ethical loyalties in conservation social science research
Dodo dilemmas: conflicting ethical loyalties in conservation social science research
In a time of deepening social and ecological crises, the question of research ethics is more pertinent than ever. Our intervention grapples with the specific personal, ethical, and methodological challenges that arise at the interface of conservation and social science. We expose these challenges through the figure of Chris, a fictional anonymised composite of our fraught diverse fieldwork experiences in Australia, Burma, Indonesian Borneo, Namibia, and Vanuatu. Fundamentally, we explore fieldwork as a series of contested loyalties: loyalties to our different human and non-human research participants, to our commitments to academic rigour, and to the project of wildlife conservation itself, while reckoning with conservation's spotted (neo)colonial past. Our struggles and reflections illustrate, first, that practical research ethics do not predetermine forms of reciprocity. Second, while we need to choose our concealments carefully and follow the principle of not doing harm, we also have the responsibility to reveal social and environmental injustices. Third, we must acknowledge that as researchers we are complicit in the practices of human and non-human violence and exclusion that suffuse conservation. Finally, given how these responsibilities move the researcher beyond a position of innocence or neutrality, academic institutions should adjust their ethics support. This intervention highlights the need for greater openness about research challenges emerging from conflicting personal, ethical, and disciplinary loyalties, in order to facilitate greater cross-disciplinary understanding. Active engagement with these ethical questions through collaborative dialogue-based fora, both before and after fieldwork, would enable learning and consequently transform research practices.
0004-0894
245-253
Fair, Hannah
ac8ce812-836e-4032-900e-b767a775bac1
Schreer, Viola
2b4bf434-8e83-47e8-9787-2b08909d1645
Keil, Paul
7177b180-4667-4db8-8d28-61d9760a9af0
Kiik, Laur
82be3404-c750-48a3-8f8a-24e76a261148
Rust, Niki
62d1a50c-355d-4d8e-95e4-9cde85e464ae
Fair, Hannah
ac8ce812-836e-4032-900e-b767a775bac1
Schreer, Viola
2b4bf434-8e83-47e8-9787-2b08909d1645
Keil, Paul
7177b180-4667-4db8-8d28-61d9760a9af0
Kiik, Laur
82be3404-c750-48a3-8f8a-24e76a261148
Rust, Niki
62d1a50c-355d-4d8e-95e4-9cde85e464ae

Fair, Hannah, Schreer, Viola, Keil, Paul, Kiik, Laur and Rust, Niki (2023) Dodo dilemmas: conflicting ethical loyalties in conservation social science research. Area, 55 (2), 245-253. (doi:10.1111/area.12839).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In a time of deepening social and ecological crises, the question of research ethics is more pertinent than ever. Our intervention grapples with the specific personal, ethical, and methodological challenges that arise at the interface of conservation and social science. We expose these challenges through the figure of Chris, a fictional anonymised composite of our fraught diverse fieldwork experiences in Australia, Burma, Indonesian Borneo, Namibia, and Vanuatu. Fundamentally, we explore fieldwork as a series of contested loyalties: loyalties to our different human and non-human research participants, to our commitments to academic rigour, and to the project of wildlife conservation itself, while reckoning with conservation's spotted (neo)colonial past. Our struggles and reflections illustrate, first, that practical research ethics do not predetermine forms of reciprocity. Second, while we need to choose our concealments carefully and follow the principle of not doing harm, we also have the responsibility to reveal social and environmental injustices. Third, we must acknowledge that as researchers we are complicit in the practices of human and non-human violence and exclusion that suffuse conservation. Finally, given how these responsibilities move the researcher beyond a position of innocence or neutrality, academic institutions should adjust their ethics support. This intervention highlights the need for greater openness about research challenges emerging from conflicting personal, ethical, and disciplinary loyalties, in order to facilitate greater cross-disciplinary understanding. Active engagement with these ethical questions through collaborative dialogue-based fora, both before and after fieldwork, would enable learning and consequently transform research practices.

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Area - 2022 - Fair - Dodo dilemmas Conflicting ethical loyalties in conservation social science research - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 5 October 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 October 2022
Published date: 14 May 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 494762
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494762
ISSN: 0004-0894
PURE UUID: 7e82b8d8-1d17-41cb-ba8e-56ed0d33c4d4
ORCID for Hannah Fair: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1758-778X

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Date deposited: 15 Oct 2024 16:40
Last modified: 19 Oct 2024 02:13

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Contributors

Author: Hannah Fair ORCID iD
Author: Viola Schreer
Author: Paul Keil
Author: Laur Kiik
Author: Niki Rust

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