Examining Critical Assumptions in Global Conservation Practice
This study analyzed 300 assumptions from conservation practitioners at The Nature Conservancy, identifying seven themes tied to human dimensions like policy, behavior and resources. Findings highlight the need to address uncertainties and broader contextual assumptions to strengthen equity-centered approaches, project design and conservation success.
Subject Tags
- Conservation Planning
- Equitable conservation
- Social Sciences
Abstract
The ability of conservation practitioners to design and implement successful conservation projects and scale up positive outcomes depends in large part on their ability to make accurate assumptions about the social and ecological contexts in which their projects operate. To understand the types of assumptions characterizing conservation practice and strategy, we examined 300 assumptions identified by conservation practitioners in project workshops at The Nature Conservancy, a large environmental nongovernmental organization, as being critical to the success of their conservation projects. We identified 7 conservation assumption themes (public attitudes and perceptions; capacity and resources; economic and behavioral factors; government, politics, and policy; impacts and scalability; knowledge and evidence; and organizational or internal factors), which primarily relate to the human dimensions of conservation (e.g., values, human behavior, relationships, policy, and politics). The conservation assumptions focused predominantly on project-level and place-based matters, rather than on the root causes of conservation problems. For people- and equity-centered conservation approaches, our findings suggest that conservation teams should systematically engage with areas of elevated uncertainty and should especially focus on axiomatic assumptions made about the broader contexts in which conservation projects operate. These insights can inform effective project design and adaptive learning and can directly improve project success.
Citation
Opatovsky, K., Pentz, B. and Loring, P.A., 2025. Examining critical assumptions in global conservation practice. Conservation Biology, p.e70102.
TNC Authors
-
Kendra Opatovsky
Project Analyst, Human Dimensions of Resilient Forest Management
Email: kendra.opatovsky@tnc.org -
Brian Pentz
Postdoctoral Human Dimensions Scientist
The Nature Conservancy
Email: brian.pentz@tnc.org -
Philip Loring
Global Director of Human Dimensions Science
The Nature Conservancy
Email: philip.loring@tnc.org