Overcoming racism in the twin spheres of conservation science and practice

Author:

Rudd Lauren F.12ORCID,Allred Shorna34ORCID,Bright Ross Julius G.12ORCID,Hare Darragh123ORCID,Nkomo Merlyn Nomusa5ORCID,Shanker Kartik67ORCID,Allen Tanesha1,Biggs Duan8,Dickman Amy129,Dunaway Michael10,Ghosh Ritwick11,González Nicole Thompson12ORCID,Kepe Thembela1314ORCID,Mbizah Moreangels M.151617ORCID,Middleton Sara L.118ORCID,Oommen Meera Anna7,Paudel Kumar1920,Sillero-Zubiri Claudio1221,Dávalos Andrea22ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Zoology, Oxford University, UK

2. Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, Oxford University, UK

3. Center for Conservation Social Sciences, Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, Cornell University, USA

4. Department of Global Development, Cornell University, USA

5. Fitzpatrick Institute of African Ornithology, University of Cape Town South Africa, Cape Town, South Africa

6. Centre for Ecological Sciences, Indian Institute of Science, India

7. Dakshin Foundation, India

8. Environmental Futures Research Institute, Griffith University, Australia

9. Lion Landscapes, Tanzania

10. Department of Sociology, Syracuse University, USA

11. Global Futures Laboratory, Arizona State University, USA

12. Department of Anthropology, University of New Mexico, USA

13. Department of Geography, University of Toronto, Canada

14. Geography Department, Rhodes University, South Africa

15. Wildlife Conservation Action, Zimbabwe

16. Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zurich, Switzerland

17. Sustainability Research Unit, Nelson Mandela University, George, South Africa

18. Department of Plant Sciences, Oxford University, UK

19. Greenhood Nepal, Nepal

20. Department of Geography, University of Cambridge, UK

21. Born Free Foundation, Ethiopia and UK

22. Biological Sciences Department, SUNY Cortland, USA

Abstract

It is time to acknowledge and overcome conservation's deep-seated systemic racism, which has historically marginalized Black, Indigenous and people of colour (BIPOC) communities and continues to do so. We describe how the mutually reinforcing ‘twin spheres’ of conservation science and conservation practice perpetuate this systemic racism. We trace how institutional structures in conservation science (e.g. degree programmes, support and advancement opportunities, course syllabuses) can systematically produce conservation graduates with partial and problematic conceptions of conservation's history and contemporary purposes. Many of these graduates go on to work in conservation practice, reproducing conservation's colonial history by contributing to programmes based on outmoded conservation models that disproportionately harm rural BIPOC communities and further restrict access and inclusion for BIPOC conservationists. We provide practical, actionable proposals for breaking vicious cycles of racism in the system of conservation we have with virtuous cycles of inclusion, equality, equity and participation in the system of conservation we want.

Funder

Natural Environment Research Council

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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