Whose conservation, revisited: how a focus on people-nature relationships spotlights new directions for conservation science

Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2025 Jan 9;380(1917):20230320. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2023.0320. Epub 2025 Jan 9.

Abstract

Georgina Mace introduced a compelling perspective on the major shifts in conservation science's framing and purpose from 1960 to 2010. A decade ago, she proposed that the conservation community had begun to move into a new framing of 'people and nature' based on changes in perspectives on the relationships between people and nature and new interdisciplinary concepts and methods used in conservation. Progress in using this frame is clear as 'two-way dynamic relationships between people and nature' have since taken centre stage in science, practice and policy. Now, responding to concerns raised that current approaches to conservation are still not meeting the scale and complexity of the challenges of the Anthropocene, we explore a newly emerging framing of 'people with nature'-an inextricably intertwined perspective on people-nature relationships. This framing builds on Mace's recognition of interconnections and change, as well as new directions offered by conservation's recent transdisciplinary engagements, to go beyond the notion of two-way flows connecting people and nature to emphasize the relationships and inseparability of 'people with nature'. This emerging framing suggests new directions for conservation science and practice to make visible, improve and reimagine degraded people-nature relationships needed to bend the curve of biodiversity loss.This article is part of the discussion meeting issue 'Bending the curve towards nature recovery: building on Georgina Mace's legacy for a biodiverse future'.

Keywords: Anthropocene; biodiversity; relational values; social-ecological systems; sustainable development; transformative change.

MeSH terms

  • Biodiversity
  • Conservation of Natural Resources* / methods
  • Humans
  • Nature