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Taming a wicked problem:resolving controversies in biodiversity offsetting

Authors :
Maron, Martine
Ives, Christopher D.
Kujala, Heini
Bull, Joseph William
Maseyk, Fleur J F
Bekessy, Sarah
Gordon, Ascelin
Watson, James E M
Lentini, Pia E.
Gibbons, Philip
Possingham, Hugh P.
Hobbs, Richard J.
Keith, David A.
Wintle, Brendan A.
Evans, Megan C.
Maron, Martine
Ives, Christopher D.
Kujala, Heini
Bull, Joseph William
Maseyk, Fleur J F
Bekessy, Sarah
Gordon, Ascelin
Watson, James E M
Lentini, Pia E.
Gibbons, Philip
Possingham, Hugh P.
Hobbs, Richard J.
Keith, David A.
Wintle, Brendan A.
Evans, Megan C.
Source :
Maron , M , Ives , C D , Kujala , H , Bull , J W , Maseyk , F J F , Bekessy , S , Gordon , A , Watson , J E M , Lentini , P E , Gibbons , P , Possingham , H P , Hobbs , R J , Keith , D A , Wintle , B A & Evans , M C 2016 , ' Taming a wicked problem : resolving controversies in biodiversity offsetting ' , BioScience , vol. 66 , no. 6 , pp. 489-498 .
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

The rising popularity of biodiversity offsetting as a tool for balancing biodiversity losses from development with equivalent gains elsewhere has sparked debate on many fronts. The fundamental questions are the following: Is offsetting good, bad, or at least better than the status quo for biodiversity conservation outcomes, and what do we need to know to decide? We present a concise synthesis of the most contentious issues related to biodiversity offsetting, categorized as ethical, social, technical, or governance challenges. In each case, we discuss avenues for reducing disagreement over these issues and identify those that are likely to remain unresolved. We argue that there are many risks associated with the unscrutinized expansion of offset policy. Nevertheless, governments are increasingly adopting offset policies, so working rapidly to clarify and-where possible-to resolve these issues is essential.<br />The rising popularity of biodiversity offsetting as a tool for balancing biodiversity losses from development with equivalent gains elsewhere has sparked debate on many fronts. The fundamental questions are the following: Is offsetting good, bad, or at least better than the status quo for biodiversity conservation outcomes, and what do we need to know to decide? We present a concise synthesis of the most contentious issues related to biodiversity offsetting, categorized as ethical, social, technical, or governance challenges. In each case, we discuss avenues for reducing disagreement over these issues and identify those that are likely to remain unresolved. We argue that there are many risks associated with the unscrutinized expansion of offset policy. Nevertheless, governments are increasingly adopting offset policies, so working rapidly to clarify and-where possible-to resolve these issues is essential.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Maron , M , Ives , C D , Kujala , H , Bull , J W , Maseyk , F J F , Bekessy , S , Gordon , A , Watson , J E M , Lentini , P E , Gibbons , P , Possingham , H P , Hobbs , R J , Keith , D A , Wintle , B A & Evans , M C 2016 , ' Taming a wicked problem : resolving controversies in biodiversity offsetting ' , BioScience , vol. 66 , no. 6 , pp. 489-498 .
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1322686562
Document Type :
Electronic Resource