Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/41815
Title: Recognising plural valuation of nature when shaping conservation policies: A New Zealand perspective
Authors: Ghijselinck, Dominique
HUGE, Jean 
McNeill, Jeff
Issue Date: 2023
Publisher: ELSEVIER GMBH
Source: JOURNAL FOR NATURE CONSERVATION, 76 (Art N° 126497)
Abstract: Plural valuation of nature seeks to overcome a lack of attention by conservationists to the multiple values people assign to nature. Proponents claim plural valuation makes conservation socially and ecologically more effective. This study analyses conservation laws and uses a survey of New Zealand conservation professionals to investigate the potential of plural valuation for conservation. Document analysis revealed a plurality of values and multiple co-existing framings of nature in New Zealand's conservation laws. Also, relational values of nature, embedded in the uniqueness of New Zealand's native fauna and flora, are important to most surveyed conservation professionals and complement instrumental reasons to value nature. However, answers showed various positions on human-nature relationships that correspond to divergent perceptions of the place of introduced species and humans in nature. The New Zealand experience illustrates how multiple values of nature could influence conservation decision-making and management in different ways. Therefore, investigators of plural valuation of nature will need to elicit the divergent underlying understandings of what nature means for individual actors. Failing to do so may lead to an underestimation of the variety of visions of conservation values assigned to nature can sustain, hamper cooperation between conservation stakeholders, frustrate the potential of plural valuation of nature and hence, lead to less effective conservation.
Notes: Ghijselinck, D (corresponding author), Univ Antwerp, Dept Biol, Bldg D,Univ pl 1, B-2610 Antwerp, Belgium.
Dominique.Ghijselinck@uantwerpen.be
Keywords: Plural valuation of nature;Relational values;Instrumental values;Biodiversity
Document URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/41815
ISSN: 1617-1381
e-ISSN: 1618-1093
DOI: 10.1016/j.jnc.2023.126497
ISI #: 001088838900001
Rights: 2023 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.
Category: A1
Type: Journal Contribution
Appears in Collections:Research publications

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