Journal article
Decline of ‘biodiversity’ in conservation policy discourse in Australia
AM Kusmanoff, F Fidler, A Gordon, SA Bekessy
Environmental Science and Policy | ELSEVIER SCI LTD | Published : 2017
Abstract
Market-based instruments along with conceptualizing the environment as a collection of ‘ecosystem services’ has become increasingly common within environmental and conservation policy. This kind of thinking is also increasingly prominent in the public discourse surrounding environment and conservation policy, particularly in the context of communicating the importance of policy measures. Language used in public discourse can have a powerful influence on how people engage with policy issues, and changes within the biodiversity and conservation discourse may have consequences for public engagement in conservation. We explored how these factors are changing with time by documenting the use of t..
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Awarded by Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions, Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
We thank Dr Cathy Oake and Dr Joab Wilson for helping source the data, and also Mathew Hardy who undertook the second coding. This research was funded by the Australian Government through the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions (CE11001000104) and the Australian Government's National Environmental Science Program, Threatened Species Hub. Bekessy and Fidler are funded by ARC Future Fellowships, Gordon was supported by an ARC Discovery Grant (DP150103122) and Kusmanoff received support through an Australian Government Research Training Scholarship.