The shifting baseline syndrome as a connective concept for more informed and just responses to global environmental change

Author:

Alleway Heidi K.1ORCID,Klein Emily S.2ORCID,Cameron Liz3ORCID,Douglass Kristina4ORCID,Govia Ishtar56ORCID,Guell Cornelia7ORCID,Lim Michelle8ORCID,Robin Libby9ORCID,Thurstan Ruth H.10ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Provide Food & Water The Nature Conservancy Arlington Virginia USA

2. The Pew Charitable Trusts Washington District of Columbia USA

3. School of Architecture and Construction University of Newcastle Newcastle New South Wales Australia

4. The Climate School Columbia University New York USA

5. Caribbean Institute for Health Research The University of West Indies Kingston Jamaica

6. Institute for Global Health University College London London UK

7. European Centre for Environment and Human Health University of Exeter Medical School Cornwall UK

8. Yong Pung How School of Law Singapore Management University Singapore Singapore

9. Australian National University Canberra Australian Capital Territory Australia

10. Centre for Ecology and Conservation University of Exeter Cornwall UK

Abstract

Abstract The concept of the ‘shifting baseline syndrome’ has assisted researchers in understanding how expectations for the health of the environment deteriorate, despite known, often widespread, and significant impacts from human activities. The concept has been used to demonstrate that more accurate assessment of historical ecosystem decline can be achieved by balancing contemporary perceptions with other sorts of evidence, and is now widely referred to in studies assessing environmental change. The potential of this concept as a model for examining and addressing complex and multidimensional social‐ecological interactions, however, is underexplored and current approaches have limitations. We perceive the shifting baseline syndrome as a rare working example of a ‘connective concept’ that can work across fields of science, the humanities and others and that re‐envisioning the concept in this way would assist us to establish more complete, true and reflective environmental baselines. Through our diverse author team, from a range of disciplines, geographies and cultural backgrounds, we identify gaps in current knowledge of the shifting baseline syndrome concept, its use and its effects, and describe several approaches that could be taken to improve investigations and capitalise on the connectivity that it fosters. This re‐envisioning could support a more informed and just way forward in addressing global environmental change. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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