Improving transparency in conservation social science research to enhance quality, equity, and collaboration
Marie‐Annick Moreau, Emily Woodhouse

TL;DR
This paper argues that greater transparency in conservation social science research can improve quality, equity, and collaboration by making researchers' positions and challenges more visible.
Contribution
The paper introduces a reflexive tool and positionality statement guidance to enhance transparency in conservation social science.
Findings
Many conservation social science papers lack transparency about data collection and researcher backgrounds.
Key gaps include reporting on language barriers, recruitment strategies, and time spent in the field.
The authors recommend using first-person writing and reflexive tools to improve research visibility and ethics.
Abstract
Recognition of the value of multidisciplinary research that bridges natural and social science perspectives has come with calls for conservation scientists to reflect critically on underlying assumptions and power relations involved in the production of knowledge and its application. We propose that improving transparency in conservation social science—around researchers’ positionality, study limitations, and fieldwork challenges—is essential to and depends on enhanced reflexivity and can allow readers to assess research quality, foster ethical research, and support constructive dialogue and collaboration across subdisciplines of conservation science. We assessed gaps and opportunities for enhanced transparency based on an in‐depth review of 39 papers on the social impacts of protected areas published in 12 conservation journals from 2010 to 2022. We evaluated transparency in these…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpecies Distribution and Climate Change · Wildlife Ecology and Conservation · Conservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management
