I was delighted to be invited to write this response and further encouraged by Kent Redford’s (Reference Redford2011) invitation to social scientists to engage the full diversity of what multiply variegated conservation communities have to offer. I agree that achieving more holistic understandings of complex conservation problems will be greatly facilitated through more holistic understandings of one another, our motivations, and how we understand the world. Portraying someone as ‘a beleaguered inhabitant of a fortress,’ (Redford, this issue) or a critic establishing their credentials by ‘bagging a BINGO’ (Brosius, Reference Brosius, Redford and Fearn2007), is not the best approach. Abandoning such portrayals is an important step towards creating, in Redford’s words, ‘…a resilient practice that conserves the world’s biodiversity while respecting and empowering people’.
Although inspired by this vision, I am puzzled by Redford’s decision not to attribute the arguments and ideas he invokes to specific critiques and writings. This renders his important essay slippery, both for building on points of agreement and for constructively engaging his own misreadings. As Redford’s vision calls for greater clarity on all sides I would like to highlight some exchanges and ideas that could promote such clarity by fostering ‘productive tensions’ (Igoe et al., Reference Igoe, Sullivan and Brockington2009) for future collaborations. My offerings, pace Redford, are ‘not meant to be exhaustive but illustrative’, focusing on four key points: (1) the putative division between conservationists and social scientists, (2) how diverse communities are made to appear homogeneous, (3) conservation and capitalism, and (4) related distributions of fortune and misfortune.
In my experience conservationists and social scientists are not distinct communities but inhabit interconnected networks. These cross-cut institutional boundaries and connect in turn to diverse groups of people. Acknowledging this reality highlights that critiques of conservation cannot be neatly construed in terms of insiders and outsiders. Critical insights are often derived from transformations and learning by conservationists themselves. Sachedina (Reference Sachedina2010), for instance, worked for the African Wildlife Foundation for 6 years before presenting his analysis of problems in East African conservation. Annette Lees of the Austral Foundation and activist Siliana Siwatibau (2010) wrote about the paradoxical effects of large conservation NGOs in Fiji. Wildlands co-founder David Johns (Reference Johns2009) actually suggested that there is no conservation community and that slick marketing will never succeed in building the kinds of social movements that will be necessary if we really hope to achieve sustainably the kinds of ‘resilient practice’ that Redford invokes.
Apropos of Johns’ concerns one interesting contribution of social science is helping to understand ways in which conservation is often constructed to conceal its own diversity. Researchers have pointed to significant discrepancies between the representation and practice of conservation (Benjaminsen & Svarstad, Reference Benjaminsen and Svarstad2010), and the tendency to recast complex political struggles as technical problems amenable to bureaucratic interventions orchestrated by experts (Brosius, Reference Brosius1999). Another important issue is the management and concealment of dissent at high profile events such as the World Conservation Congress (McDonald, Reference McDonald2010) and the ways in which a vision of win-win market-based solutions is celebrated and disseminated in the process (Buscher, Reference Buscher2008; Redford & Adams Reference Redford and Adams2009).
This brings me to connections between conservation and commerce, which Redford correctly notes are not new. It is important to understand how the commoditization of nature has changed over time (cf. Redford & Adams, op cit) but at least as important to understand the specific forms this commoditization is taking right now (for an overview see Brockington & Duffy Reference Brockington and Duffy2010), particularly those forms that promise to make the world healthy and beautiful through consumption and investment. Neves (Reference Neves2010), for instance, outlines how presentations of whale watching as an enlightened alternative to whale hunting conceals paradoxes such as the carbon footprint of air travel and the effects of tour boats on cetacean echolocation (cf. Carrier & Macleod, Reference Carrier and MacLeod2005). My work (Igoe Reference Igoe2010) examines how images of conservation promote the possibility of eating our world and saving it too. Finally, Sullivan (Reference Sullivan2010) highlights the contradictions of financial mechanisms such as carbon credits (see also Checker, Reference Checker2009), species banks and extinction derivatives. All of this work is directly concerned with conservation beyond the boundaries of parks, and especially the notion that conservation can mitigate the negative ecological impacts of shopping malls, oil pipelines, gold mines and the like.
There are also questions concerning the ways in which costs and benefits of these transformations are distributed. Such questions are not served by asserting that parks, and conservation interventions in general, are all the same and always bad for people living near them but by recognizing that outcomes in any context are related to specific cultural, historical and political circumstances (West et al., Reference West, Igoe and Brockington2006). Attending to these will foster more informed understandings of how best to promote conservation that is effective and equitable. Related debates are currently a matter of some productive exchanges, beginning with a study by Wittemeyer et al (2008). This study, which suggests that parks are generally beneficial to local people, has garnered critical responses from ecologists and social scientists, encapsulated in a special issue of Conservation and Society edited by Hoffman et al. (Reference Hoffman, Fay and Joppa2011). This ongoing exchange reveals that a lot more work needs to be done before we can safely generalize about these matters.
Finally, I would like to suggest some resources for readers who would like to learn more, and to raise a question for continued engagement. Firstly, the resources: the IUCN Commission on Environmental, Economic and Social Policy publishes an accessible journal called Policy Matters that offers extensive analysis and empirical case studies of the human side of conservation; Current Conservation is a journal dedicated to making research and news from the natural and social sciences accessible to a broader audience; and Just Conservation is a Facebook initiative dedicated to providing an open forum for achieving conservation with justice. Secondly, the question: given all this nuanced analysis, what is preventing more effective communication and engagement? This is a question that calls for careful reflection on all sides but also more open acknowledgement of the relative power of different people, disciplines and organizations in different contexts to show and tell what conservation is about and how it affects both human and more than human worlds.