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Hard choices: Making trade-offs between biodiversity conservation and human well-being

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dc.creator McShane, Thomas O
dc.creator Hirsch, Paul D
dc.creator Trung, Tran C
dc.creator Songorwa, Alexander N
dc.creator Kinzig, A
dc.creator Monteferri, B
dc.creator Mutekanga, D
dc.creator Thang, Hoang V
dc.creator Dammert, Juan L
dc.creator Pulgar-Vidal, M
dc.creator Welch-Devine, M
dc.creator Brosius, J P
dc.creator Coppolillo, P
dc.creator O’Connor, S
dc.date 2022-03-01T09:22:40Z
dc.date 2022-03-01T09:22:40Z
dc.date 2010-05-18
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T08:50:33Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T08:50:33Z
dc.identifier 0006-3207
dc.identifier https://www.suaire.sua.ac.tz/handle/123456789/3953
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/90337
dc.description Win–win solutions that both conserve biodiversity and promote human well-being are difficult to realize. Trade-offs and the hard choices they entail are the norm. Since 2008, the Advancing Conservation in a Social Context (ACSC) research initiative has been investigating the complex trade-offs that exist between human well-being and biodiversity conservation goals, and between conservation and other economic, political and social agendas across multiple scales. Resolving trade-offs is difficult because social prob- lems – of which conservation is one – can be perceived and understood in a variety of disparate ways, influenced (in part at least) by how people are raised and educated, their life experiences, and the options they have faced. Pre-existing assumptions about the ‘‘right” approach to conservation often obscure important differences in both power and understanding, and can limit the success of policy and program- matic interventions. The new conservation debate challenges conservationists to be explicit about losses, costs, and hard choices so they can be openly discussed and honestly negotiated. Not to do so can lead to unrealized expectations, and ultimately to unresolved conflict. This paper explores the background and limitations of win–win approaches to conservation and human well-being, discusses the prospect of approaching conservation challenges in terms of trade-offs and hard choices, and presents a set of guiding principles that can serve to orient strategic analysis and communication regarding trade-offs.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher Elsevier
dc.subject Trade-offs
dc.subject Development
dc.subject Biodiversity conservation
dc.subject Human well-being
dc.title Hard choices: Making trade-offs between biodiversity conservation and human well-being
dc.type Article


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