Wed, Aug 17, 2022: 11:00 AM-11:15 AM
520E
Background/Question/MethodsThe use of assisted migration (AM) as a climate adaptation strategy in forests has passed an inflection point. No longer a tentative proposal, AM is becoming a reality in jurisdictions across Canada. While myriad uncertainties persist, pilot programs are now well underway, including in British Columbia (BC). Gaining a complete understanding of the effectiveness and feasibility of AM at scale requires not only a thorough comprehension of ecological impacts, but of societal dimensions as well. I will discuss findings across a five-year study which examined how publics, stakeholders, and end users think about the risks, benefits, and overall acceptability of AM. Findings are based on datasets that include public (n=1929) and practitioner (n=657) surveys, focus groups (n=16) and cost-benefit analyses in four forest-dependent communities, in-depth interviews (n=27), and document analyses.
Results/ConclusionsThe results show resigned acceptance of the inevitability of increasing interventions in forests, with all of the groups studied being significantly less supportive of AM outside of natural range as opposed to within. Crucially, far more than the intervention itself, the risks that people are most concerned with revolve around who will deploy the technology, how decisions about its use will be made, and whether AM will merely perpetuate status quo models of forest governance that are not widely accepted. I will discuss the role of knowledge politics in perpetuating the status quo, and how values about what is perceived as natural, and mistrust in managing authorities contributes to what can best be described as reluctant support for AM. As a future of increased interventions seems all but inevitable, issues of knowledge, values, and trust require resolution. Accordingly, involving diverse perspectives at early stages of policy-making is essential to ensure that new technologies – like AM – address the broader needs of society, and not just a select few.
Results/ConclusionsThe results show resigned acceptance of the inevitability of increasing interventions in forests, with all of the groups studied being significantly less supportive of AM outside of natural range as opposed to within. Crucially, far more than the intervention itself, the risks that people are most concerned with revolve around who will deploy the technology, how decisions about its use will be made, and whether AM will merely perpetuate status quo models of forest governance that are not widely accepted. I will discuss the role of knowledge politics in perpetuating the status quo, and how values about what is perceived as natural, and mistrust in managing authorities contributes to what can best be described as reluctant support for AM. As a future of increased interventions seems all but inevitable, issues of knowledge, values, and trust require resolution. Accordingly, involving diverse perspectives at early stages of policy-making is essential to ensure that new technologies – like AM – address the broader needs of society, and not just a select few.