Language matters for biodiversity

Author:

Fish Robert D12ORCID,Austen Gail E1,Bentley Jacob W1,Dallimer Martin32,Fisher Jessica C1,Irvine Katherine N4,Bentley Phoebe R1,Nawrath Maximilian15,Davies Zoe G1

Affiliation:

1. Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology , University of Kent, Canterbury, England, United Kingdom

2. Centre for Environmental Policy, Imperial College London , London, England, United Kingdom

3. Sustainability Research Institute, School of Earth and Environment , University of Leeds, Leeds, England, United Kingdom

4. Social, Economic, and Geographic Sciences Department , James Hutton Institute, Aberdeen, Scotland, United Kingdom

5. Norwegian Institute for Water Research , Oslo, Norway

Abstract

Abstract Language is central to the way people learn about the natural world. A salient concern of the biodiversity conservation arena has been to understand how language can be employed by scientists to communicate knowledge to nonexpert audiences and build ecological literacy. The use of analogy and narrative by scientists are prominent techniques. In this article, we consider how these two modes of language-based reasoning extend into ordinary conversational language use by the public, specifically when articulating everyday understanding and experiences of biodiversity. Drawing on a process of public engagement in a UK woodland environment, a typological framework based on principles of analogical and narrative reasoning is developed to characterize the precise character of processes of everyday biodiversity sense making. The implications of the framework are discussed in the context of future biodiversity research, particularly its participatory and educational dimensions.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference47 articles.

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