Journal ArticleParallel publicationPublished versionDOI: 10.48548/pubdata-3137

Engagement for genetic modification technologies in conservation: For whom, how, and for what ends?

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Date of first publication2025-08-16
Date of publication in PubData 2026-03-17

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English

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Variant form of DOI: 10.1016/j.envsci.2025.104190
Nissen, S., Buelow, F. A., Taitingfong, R., & Black, A. (2025). Engagement for genetic modification technologies in conservation: For whom, how, and for what ends? Environmental Science & Policy, 171, Article 104190.
Published in ISSN: 1873-6416
Environmental Science & Policy

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Abstract

Questions of engagement loom large for the use of genetic modification technologies in conservation. As scientific teams rapidly move towards implementing changes that will fundamentally alter entire species, concerns are regularly raised that associated engagement activities are inadequate. It is therefore vital to take stock of recent social research that critically examines how engagement is being enacted: who is engaged and by whom, how and on what terms, and for whom or what those processes serve. Despite a rise in calls for engagement, our review shows emergent gestures towards engagement by developers and regulators lean strongly towards narrow instrumental approaches that reinforce knowledge hierarchies and existing power imbalances. It contributes to engagement practices that are often vague and tokenistic, and focused on one-way education and snapshots of opinion, rather than mutual reciprocity and dialogue. To counter these undercurrents, our review draws attention to the ways social researchers are seeking to reorient engagement for genetic modification towards its more substantive and democratic possibilities, through articulating process, amplifying plurality, and acknowledging contestation.

Keywords

Engagement; Genetic Modification; Gene Drive; Conservation; Social Research; Participation

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