Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/111770
Title: Global concerns related to water biology and security: The need for language and policies that safeguard living resources versus those that dilute scientific knowledge
Authors: Hughes, Robert M.
Karr, James R.
Vadas, Robert L.
DellaSala, Dominick A.
Callisto, Marcos
Feio, Maria João 
Ferreira, Teresa
Kleynhans, Neels
Ruaro, Renata
Yoder, Chris O.
Michael, J. Hal
Keywords: Corruption; Ethics; Science censoring; Science policy; Water resource degradation
Issue Date: 2023
Publisher: Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Serial title, monograph or event: Water Biology and Security
Volume: 2
Issue: 4
Abstract: Increasingly, scientists and non-scientists, especially employees of government agencies, tend to use weak or equivocal language when making statements related to science policy and governmental regulation. We use recent publications to provide examples of vague language versus examples of strong language when authors write about regulating anthropogenic pressures on natural resources. Lifeless language is common in agency reports, policy documents, and even scientific papers published by academics. Such language limits success in regulating anthropogenic pressures on natural resources. This challenge must be recognized and countered as a driver of the condition of water and associated resources. We also list sources of vague wording, provide global examples of how ambiguous language and political influences have contributed to water resource degradation, discuss the recent history of science censorship, and offer possible solutions for more direct scientific discourse. We found that: (1) equivocal language was especially common in concluding statements and not only by government employees; (2) authors discussed confusing language concerns in an agency publication; and (3) agency employees sometimes used active, strong language. Key drivers of weak language include: (1) holding on to old paradigms and resisting new knowledge; (2) scientific uncertainty; (3) institutional manuscript review policies; (4) employment and funding insecurity; and (5) avoiding the appearance of advocacy. Examples associated with euphemistic language included climate change, flow and physical habitat alteration, dams, agriculture, mining, forestry, and fisheries, as well as resistance towards monitoring, assessing, and reporting ecological conditions. Suggestions for mitigating equivocal language involve employment protections and greater focus on scientific ethics. We conclude that natural resource scientists should resist calls to employ imprecise language. Instead, they should be strong advocates for prescriptive and protective natural resource actions—based on their science—to halt and reverse the systemic degradation of those resources.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/111770
ISSN: 27727351
DOI: 10.1016/j.watbs.2023.100191
Rights: openAccess
Appears in Collections:I&D MARE - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais

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