TY - JOUR
T1 - Five approaches to producing actionable science in conservation
AU - Carr Kelman, Candice
AU - Barton, Chris J.
AU - Whitman, Kyle
AU - Lhoest, Simon
AU - Anderson, Derrick M.
AU - Gerber, Leah R.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by a Science of Science Innovation Policy NSF Award (number 1661406) to L.R.G. and D.A. S.P.L. was supported by a Postdoctoral Fellowship of the Belgian American Educational Foundation.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Society for Conservation Biology.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - The knowledge produced by conservation scientists must be actionable in order to address urgent conservation challenges. To understand the process of creating actionable science, we interviewed 71 conservation scientists who had participated in 1 of 3 fellowship programs focused on training scientists to become agents of change. Using a grounded theory approach, we identified 16 activities that these researchers employed to make their scientific products more actionable. Some activities were more common than others and, arguably, more foundational. We organized these activities into 3 nested categories (motivations, strategies, and tactics). Using a co-occurrence matrix, we found that most activities were positively correlated. These correlations allowed us to identify 5 approaches, framed as profiles, to actionable science: the discloser, focused on open access; the educator, focused on science communication; the networker, focused on user needs and building relationships; the collaborator, focused on boundary spanning; and the pluralist, focused on knowledge coproduction resulting in valuable outcomes for all parties. These profiles build on one another in a hierarchy determined by their complexity and level of engagement, their potential to support actionable science, and their proximity to ideal coproduction with knowledge users. Our results provide clear guidance for conservation scientists to generate actionable science to address the global biodiversity conservation challenge.
AB - The knowledge produced by conservation scientists must be actionable in order to address urgent conservation challenges. To understand the process of creating actionable science, we interviewed 71 conservation scientists who had participated in 1 of 3 fellowship programs focused on training scientists to become agents of change. Using a grounded theory approach, we identified 16 activities that these researchers employed to make their scientific products more actionable. Some activities were more common than others and, arguably, more foundational. We organized these activities into 3 nested categories (motivations, strategies, and tactics). Using a co-occurrence matrix, we found that most activities were positively correlated. These correlations allowed us to identify 5 approaches, framed as profiles, to actionable science: the discloser, focused on open access; the educator, focused on science communication; the networker, focused on user needs and building relationships; the collaborator, focused on boundary spanning; and the pluralist, focused on knowledge coproduction resulting in valuable outcomes for all parties. These profiles build on one another in a hierarchy determined by their complexity and level of engagement, their potential to support actionable science, and their proximity to ideal coproduction with knowledge users. Our results provide clear guidance for conservation scientists to generate actionable science to address the global biodiversity conservation challenge.
KW - actionable science
KW - becas comprometidas
KW - boundary spanning
KW - boundary work
KW - ciencia práctica
KW - ciencias de la conservación
KW - comunicación de la ciencia
KW - conservation science
KW - coproducción
KW - coproduction
KW - del conocimiento a la acción
KW - engaged scholarship
KW - expansión de fronteras
KW - knowledge to action
KW - science communication
KW - trabajo fronterizo
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U2 - 10.1111/cobi.14039
DO - 10.1111/cobi.14039
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85144138666
SN - 0888-8892
JO - Conservation Biology
JF - Conservation Biology
ER -