Contents
Why
do we need a new journal on conservation?
Kamaljit S.Bawa and Vasant Saberwal
WE
LIVE IN an era of tremendous economic and environmental change.
This change has significant consequences not only for the fate of
natural ecosystems, but also for the human societies that are largely
responsible for such change. We hope that Conservation and Society
will serve as a platform for debate on the politics, the science
and the history of change as well as the conservation of natural
resources.
We
are aware that there are several excellent journals devoted to conservation.
The vast majority of them, however, are located in the West, with
two consequences: First, most of these journals are expensive and
hence difficult to access in the Third World. Second, much of what
is published in these journals has relevance to the First rather
than the Third World. We hope to make Conservation and Society available
to readers at relatively cheap rates, readily accessible over the
internet. We also hope to provide the space that will enable a more
involved discussion around issues that have immediate relevance
to the Third rather than
the First World.
Our
primary mandate is to bring interdisciplinary perspectives to bear
upon the problem of environmental impoverishment. As can be seen
from the editorial board, we have consciously chosen to work with
both biologists and social scientists in the hope that we can initiate
real discussions across the current disciplinary divides we are
all familiar with.
Putting
this first issue together has demonstrated just how challenging
this task is likely to be. Even within the editorial board there
have been differences over what constitutes rigorous research. Editorial
discussions have tended to follow disciplinary dividesósuch
that biologists have seen the absence of quantitative data as indicative
of a piece being ësoftí, lacking in analytical rigour.
Equally, social scientists have struggled with work that is highly
quantitative, often failing to understand the nuances or implications
of data presented in some articles.
Navigating
this divide is of the utmost importance from a conservation perspective.
Academics and professionals in the social and natural sciences profess
to having identical interests with regard to conserving and better
using natural resources. Yet these same individuals have rarely
managed to engage in fruitful conversation with one another.
Pulling
this journal together will push our limits as we attempt to work
across disciplinary boundaries. We will write about these experiences
as we go along for we feel that the very act of managing this journal
is part of a much larger process of unpacking the constituent elements
of the disciplinary divide. We are hopeful that many of you will
join what promises to be a challenging, and thoroughly bumpy, ride.
We
invite comments and†manuscripts†from our readers.†Apart
from letters, essays, reviews, commentaries and research contributions,
we also welcome guest editorials.† The journal†will
obviously be shaped by its contributors; hopefully many of these
contributions will help shape contemporary debates on the question
of the interaction between society and the environment.
We
anticipate publishing the journal twice a year to start with, but
are working our way towards a quarterly publication. While our editorial
team has a definite slant towards South Asia (India really), we
are hoping to have a more diverse board in time. We are committed,
however, to publishing articles from across the world, and on any
part of the world. Our only condition in accepting articles for
review is that they fit our mandate of publishing articles on conservation
with a demonstrable link to society.
This
first issue of Conservation and Society is dedicated to the memory
of Dr T.N. Khoshoo. Khoshooís work and commitment inspired
a generation of scientists, including many on the editorial board
of Conservation and Society.
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