Journal article
Beyond Advocacy: Making Space for Conservation Scientists in Public Debate
GE Garrard, F Fidler, BC Wintle, YE Chee, SA Bekessy
Conservation Letters | Published : 2016
DOI: 10.1111/conl.12193
Abstract
The topic of advocacy by scientists has been debated for decades, yet there is little agreement about whether scientists can or should be advocates. The fear of crossing a line into advocacy continues to hold many scientists back from contributing to public discourse, impoverishing public debate about important issues. We believe that progress in this debate is limited by a misconception about the relationship between scientific integrity and objectivity. We begin by unpacking this relationship and debunking three common misconceptions about advocacy by scientists: namely, that advocacy is harmful to scientific credibility, beyond the scope of science, and incompatible with science, which is..
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Awarded by Division of Arctic Sciences
Funding Acknowledgements
This research is supported by the Australian Research Council's Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions, Centre of Excellence for Biosecurity and Risk Analysis, and an ARC Linkage Project (LP110100304). G.G. is supported by The Myer Foundation. B.W. is supported by the National Environmental Science Program (NESP) Threatened Species Hub (previously National Environmental Research Program [NERP]). S.B. is an ARC Future Fellow. The authors thank, without implicating, M. Runge and M. Burgman for constructive feedback on earlier versions of this manuscript.