16
2.5.2 The IPCC model
The IPCC has established itself as the world’s
authority on climate change, and whilst there
are issues in terms of the balance between politics and science, it remains as the best example
of global dissemination of research and collaboration of scientists and policy makers (Reid &
Mace, 2003). It has been suggested that such a model should exist
for the conservation of
biodiversity, and indeed the MEA has gone some way towards filling this gap and needs to be
based on the best scientific information (Reid & Mace, 2003). Whilst there can be questions as
to the influence this would have on a local level, it would obviously be of benefit to facilitate
wider use and collation of existing information, perhaps with an element of systematic review
element incorporated.
2.5.3 The advocacy debate
There is also a debate amongst conservation biologists as to how scientific information should
be presented, and whether scientists should simply report and interpret their findings, or make
recommendations for their use. Various authors have suggested that although advocacy is
embedded
in the scientific literature, it is not the role of scientists to involve themselves in
policy as this ruins their credibility as a provider of information (Scott et al, 2007; Tear et al,
2005; Lackey, 2007). Others believe that the scientists are in the best position to interpret the
results of their study (Ehrlich, 2002), but should do so without becoming ‘politicised’ (Lach,
2003). There are also those who believe that scientists need to interpret
their findings and
advocate a use for them (Freyfogle & Newton, 2002; Brussard & Tull, 2007), as scientific
facts can easily be separated from preference.
Those who are against advocacy in science point out the need
to separate science from
feasibility (Tear et al, 2005). Whilst this is true to a certain extent (and issues with this have
already been identified in section 2.1.1), conservation is a normative science (Meijaard &
Shiel, 2007) and it is necessary to place the scientific findings in a practical context as this is
likely the only way they can be used (Robinson, 2006). Perhaps the issue has become slightly
polarised by this debate, and should be viewed more in terms of the fact that scientists should
be making concrete recommendations for the use of their findings other than just for ‘further
research’. An analysis of the Indonesian literature (Meijaard & Sheil, 2007), for example,
17
showed a distinct lack of concrete recommendations that could realistically be put to practical
use. Such recommendations for action would seem to be
a way of facilitating the
implementation of scientific research and it would be interesting to establish whether those
scientists making concrete recommendations based on their
findings are more likely to
influence conservation practice.