Ask most conservationists to talk about their impact, and you’ll hear stories of forests protected, of species saved, or of new technologies making a difference. But if you take a step back from those outcomes, conservation has always been about people and their behavior, about those choices we’ve all made that have led to the biodiversity crisis we now face. That makes behavior change essential to the work conservationists do: Shifting people away from actions that drive biodiversity loss and toward those that sustain nature. And let’s face it: Despite important successes, we haven’t shifted behavior at the scale or pace the crisis demands.
Bujold et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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