Summary information

Study title

Dataset: Identifying major factors for success and failure of conservation programs in Europe

Creator

Taffner, Julian ( Central Coordination Office of the BMBF-Research Initiative for the Conservation of Biodiversity (FEdA), Senckenberg Society for Nature Research, Senckenberganlage 25, 60325 Frankfurt am Main, Germany)

Study number / PID

10.7802/2790 (GESIS)

10.7802/2790 (DOI)

Data access

Informationen nicht verfügbar

Series

Nicht verfügbar

Abstract

In Europe, various conservation programs adopted to maintain or restore biodiversity have experienced differing levels of success. However, a synthesis about major factors for success of biodiversity-related conservation programs across ecosystems and national boundaries, such as incentives, subsidies, enforcement, participation, or spatial context, is missing. Using a balanced scorecard survey among experts, we analyzed and compared factors contributing to success or failure of three different conservation programs: two government programs (Natura 2000 and the ecological measures of the Water Framework Directive) and one conservation program of a non-governmental organization (NGO; Rewilding Europe), all focusing on habitat and species conservation. The experts perceived the NGO program as more successful in achieving biodiversity-related aims than governmental conservation legislation. Among the factors perceived to influence the success of biodiversity conservation, several stood out: Biodiversity-damaging subsidies, external economic interests competing with conservation goals or policies conflicting with biodiversity conservation were recognized as major factors for the lack of conservation success. Outreach to raise societal interest and awareness as well as stakeholder involvement were perceived as closely related to the success of programs. Our expert survey demonstrated that external factors from economy and policy often hinder success of conservation programs, while societal and environmental factors rather contribute to it. This study implies that conservation programs should be designed to be as inclusive as possible and provides a basis for developing a standardized methodology that explicitly considers indirect drivers from areas such as economy, policy and society.

Topics

Nicht verfügbar

Methodology

Data collection period

01/12/2021 - 01/07/2022

Country

Time dimension

cross-section

Analysis unit

Nicht verfügbar

Universe

Nicht verfügbar

Sampling procedure

Non-probability Sample - Purposive Sample

Kind of data

Nicht verfügbar

Data collection mode

Self-administered questionnaire:E-mail

Access

Publisher

GESIS Datenarchiv für Sozialwissenschaften

Publication year

2024

Terms of data access

Freier Zugang (ohne Registrierung) - Die Forschungsdaten können von jedem direkt heruntergeladen werden. CC BY 4.0: Attribution (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.de)

Related publications

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