2022
DOI: 10.1177/19400829221134893
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Communicating the Biodiversity Crisis: From “Warnings” to Positive Engagement

Abstract: Background: Effective communication can play a vital role in societal transformations towards sustainability and biodiversity restoration. However, the complexity and long-term nature of environmental change presents a communication challenge. If not carefully navigated, messages around environmental degradation can lead to audience disengagement and issue fatigue, at a time when motivation, engagement and positive action is required. Methods: In this Conservation in Action piece, we describe the principles of… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…However, nature would be worse off without conservationists. Optimism movements that share examples of positive conservation outcomes, such as Conservation Optimism, Earth Optimism, and Ocean Optimism, may help illustrate this point (de Lange et al., 2022). Some individuals struggling with the bigger picture may find it helpful to engage with these movements and concentrate on their positive roles within collective conservation efforts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…However, nature would be worse off without conservationists. Optimism movements that share examples of positive conservation outcomes, such as Conservation Optimism, Earth Optimism, and Ocean Optimism, may help illustrate this point (de Lange et al., 2022). Some individuals struggling with the bigger picture may find it helpful to engage with these movements and concentrate on their positive roles within collective conservation efforts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The causes of this emotion are complex and multifaceted but stem partly from concerns about future outcomes for nature (Boon, 2022; Clayton, 2018; Pienkowski, Keane, et al., 2022). Optimism movements (e.g., Conservation Optimism) have emerged in part to help alleviate the emotional toll of environmental work (de Lange et al., 2022). In general, situational optimism is the expectation of positive outcomes within a specific context (Tusaie & Patterson, 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This shall enable and empower farmers to better understand their own relationships with the natural world and to identify their own ways of contributing to the transition to sustainability according to their individual strengths, capacities, and identities. Such messages require a clear objective, must be targeted to their specific audience, describe a desired outcome, and outline an appropriate measure of success [80].…”
Section: Discussion and Potential Solutionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Messages about conser vation that emphasise loss can inhibit pro-environmental action (Jacobson et al, 2019), perhaps because recipients may deliberately avoid negative information that would oth erwise lead to psychological discomfort (Karlsson et al, 2009). In contrast, optimistic messages can be unifying and empowering-inspiring hope and collective action to achieve pro-environmental outcomes (de Lange et al, 2022;McAfee et al, 2019). Such an idea is fundamental to Common Cause (Blackmore et al, 2013), an organisation who ad vised that ENGOs should strive to promote collective activism and avoid disempowering messages that reduce recipients to merely passive sources of income.…”
Section: Using 'Positive' and 'Intrinsic' Framingmentioning
confidence: 99%