Failures to disagree' is essential for environmental science to
effectively influence policy development.
Abstract
While environmental science, and ecology in particular, is working to
provide better understanding to base sustainable decisions on, the way
scientific understanding is developed can at times be detrimental to
this cause. Locked-in debates are often unnecessarily polarized and can
compromise any common goals of the opposing camps. The present paper is
inspired by a resolved debate from an unrelated field of psychology
where Nobel laureate David Kahneman and Garry Klein turned what seemed
to be a locked-in debate into a constructive process for their fields.
The present paper is also motivated by previous discourses regarding the
role of thresholds in natural systems for management and governance, but
its scope of analysis targets the scientific process within complex
social-ecological systems in general. We identified five features of
environmental science that appear to predispose for locked-in debates:
1) The strongly context dependent behaviour of ecological systems. 2)
The dominant role of single hypothesis testing. 3) The high prominence
given to theory demonstration compared investigation. 4) The effect of
urgent demands to inform and steer policy. This fertile ground is
further cultivated by human psychological aspects as well as the
structure of funding and publication systems.