Article (Scientific journals)
The significance of meaning in and the meaning of biodiversity research: Why IPBES needs the social sciences and humanities
Jetzkowitz, Jens; Wong, Catherine; Lidskog, Rolf et al.
2017In Innovation: The European Journal of Social Science Research
Peer reviewed
 

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Keywords :
Inter-disciplinary research; Biodiversity research; Deliberation
Abstract :
[en] The term “biodiversity” is often used to describe phenomena of nature, which can be studied without a reference to the socially constructed, evaluative, or indeed normative contexts. In our paper, we challenge this conception by focusing particularly on methodological aspects of biodiversity research. We thereby engage with the idea of interdisciplinary biodiversity research as a scientific approach directed at the recognition and management of contemporary society in its ecological embedding. By doing this, we explore how research on and assessments of biodiversity can be enhanced if meaning, aspiration, desires, and related aspects of agency are methodically taken into account. In six sections, we substantiate our claim that the discourse on biodiversity (including the IPBES (Intergovernmental science-policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services) debate) is incomplete without contributions from the social sciences and humanities. In the introduction, a brief overview of biodiversity’s conceptual history is provided showing that “biodiversity” is a lexical invention intended to create a strong political momentum. However, that does not impede its usability as a research concept. Section 2 examines the origins of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) by way of sociological discourse analysis. Subsequently, it proposes a matrix as a means to structure the ambiguities and tensions inherent in the CBD. The matrix reemphasizes our main thesis regarding the need to bring social and ethical expertise to the biodiversity discourse. In Section 3, we offer a brief sketch of the different methods of the natural and social sciences as well as ethics. This lays the groundwork for our Section 4, which explains and illustrates what social sciences and ethics can contribute to biodiversity research. Section 5 turns from research to politics and argues that biodiversity governance necessitates deliberative discourses in which participation of lay people plays an important role. Section 6 provides our conclusions.
Disciplines :
Sociology & social sciences
Author, co-author :
Jetzkowitz, Jens;  University of Marburg
Wong, Catherine ;  University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Language and Literature, Humanities, Arts and Education (FLSHASE) > Identités, Politiques, Sociétés, Espaces (IPSE)
Lidskog, Rolf;  Örebro Universitet
van Koppen, Kris;  Wageningen University
Konrad, Ott;  Kiel University
External co-authors :
yes
Language :
English
Title :
The significance of meaning in and the meaning of biodiversity research: Why IPBES needs the social sciences and humanities
Publication date :
27 July 2017
Journal title :
Innovation: The European Journal of Social Science Research
ISSN :
1351-1610
Publisher :
Routledge
Special issue title :
The role of the social sciences and humanities in the IPBES process.
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed
Focus Area :
Sustainable Development
Available on ORBilu :
since 22 August 2017

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