6533b850fe1ef96bd12a83b3
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Ethics in biodiversity conservation : The meaning and importance of pluralism
Gonzalo Cortés CapanoKortetmäki TeeaAnna HausmannEnrico Di Mininsubject
1171 Geosciencespragmatismkestävä kehityspluralismisustainabilityeettisyysoikeudenmukaisuusbiodiversiteettivalue pluralismethical pluralismglobaali oikeudenmukaisuuspragmatismirecognitionluonnonsuojeluenvironmental justiceympäristöetiikkaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservationdescription
Addressing the global extent of the current biodiversity crisis requires engaging with the existence of multiple equally legitimate values, but also with diverse ethical perspectives underpinning conceptions of right and wrong actions. However, western monist positions have mostly explicitly or implicitly directed conservation strategies by defining the space of legitimate arguments, overlooking solutions that do not fit neatly the chosen approaches. As ignoring diverse ethical positions leads to injustices and reduces the potential of conserving biodiversity, there is a need to recognise and navigate the ethical landscape. Ethical pluralism may provide opportunities to do so. However, the ethical underpinnings of pluralism have not been fully considered in biodiversity conservation. In this article, we elaborate the meaning, importance and limits of ethical pluralism while highlighting opportu-nities and challenges that the position may entail in biodiversity conservation science and practice. We argue that ethical pluralism allows recognising not only the existence of incommensurable plural values, but also that moral conflicts should embrace intra and inter-cultural criticism and the legitimacy of agonism and dissent, as opposed to monistic and relativistic approaches. We conclude by discussing how grounding ethical pluralism in envi-ronmental justice and environmental pragmatism may contribute to navigating the ethical landscape in biodi-versity conservation. Particularly, we highlight opportunities to: i) promote (non-anthropocentrically understood) recognition and environmental justice in biodiversity conservation and, ii) move beyond theoretical debates seeking the single best ethical theory and focus on ethical diversity as a common source of possible solutions. Peer reviewed
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2022-11-01 |