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Research reveals shocking detail on how Australia’s environmental scientists are being silenced


9 September 2020 at 5:52 pm
Robyn Gulliver
As Don Driscoll and his colleagues write, scientists in government, industry and universities are being gagged from communicating the evidence on critical environmental issues. Often, this means the facts don’t reach the public or government ministers. 


Robyn Gulliver | 9 September 2020 at 5:52 pm


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Research reveals shocking detail on how Australia’s environmental scientists are being silenced
9 September 2020 at 5:52 pm

As Don Driscoll and his colleagues write, scientists in government, industry and universities are being gagged from communicating the evidence on critical environmental issues. Often, this means the facts don’t reach the public or government ministers. 

Ecologists and conservation experts in government, industry and universities are routinely constrained in communicating scientific evidence on threatened species, mining, logging and other threats to the environment, our new research has found.

Our study, just published, shows how important scientific information about environmental threats often does not reach the public or decision-makers, including government ministers.

In some cases, scientists self-censor information for fear of damaging their careers, losing funding or being misrepresented in the media. In others, senior managers or ministers’ officers prevented researchers from speaking truthfully on scientific matters.

This information blackout, termed “science suppression”, can hide environmentally damaging practices and policies from public scrutiny. The practice is detrimental to both nature and democracy.

Our mission is to share knowledge and inform decisions. 

Code of silence

Our online survey ran from 25 October 2018 to 11 February 2019. Through advertising and other means, we targeted Australian ecologists, conservation scientists, conservation policy makers and environmental consultants. This included academics, government employees and scientists working for industry such as consultants and non-government organisations.

Some 220 people responded to the survey, comprising:

  • 88 working in universities
  • 79 working in local, state or federal government
  • 47 working in industry, such as environmental consulting and environmental NGOs
  • 6 who could not be classified.

In a series of multiple-choice and open-ended questions, we asked respondents about the prevalence and consequences of suppressing science communication.

About half (52 per cent) of government respondents, 38 per cent from industry and 9 per cent from universities had been prohibited from communicating scientific information.

Communications via traditional (40 per cent) and social (25 per cent) media were most commonly prohibited across all workplaces. There were also instances of internal communications (15 per cent), conference presentations (11 per cent) and journal papers (5 per cent) being prohibited.

 

 

‘Ministers are not receiving full information’

Some 75 per cent of respondents reported having refrained from making a contribution to public discussion when given the opportunity – most commonly in traditional media or social media. A small number of respondents self-censored conference presentations (9 per cent) and peer-reviewed papers (7 per cent).

Factors constraining commentary from government respondents included senior management (82 per cent), workplace policy (72 per cent), a minister’s office (63 per cent) and middle management (62 per cent).

Fear of barriers to advancement (49 per cent) and concern about media misrepresentation (49 per cent) also discouraged public communication by government respondents.

Almost 60 per cent of government respondents and 36 per cent of industry respondents reported unduly modified internal communications.

One government respondent said:

“Due to ‘risk management’ in the public sector […] ministers are not receiving full information and advice and/or this is being ‘massaged’ by advisors (sic).”

University respondents, more than other workplaces, avoided public commentary out of fear of how they would be represented by the media (76 per cent), fear of being drawn beyond their expertise (73 per cent), stress (55 per cent), fear that funding might be affected (53 per cent) and uncertainty about their area of expertise (52 per cent).

One university respondent said:

“I proposed an article in The Conversation about the impacts of mining […] The uni I worked at didn’t like the idea as they received funding from (the mining company).”

Critical conservation issues suppressed

Information suppression was most common on the issue of threatened species. Around half of industry and government respondents, and 28 per cent of university respondents, said their commentary on the topic was constrained.

Government respondents also reported being constrained in commenting on logging and climate change.

One government respondent said:

“We are often forbidden (from) talking about the true impacts of, say, a threatening process […] especially if the government is doing little to mitigate the threat […] In this way the public often remains ‘in the dark’ about the true state and trends of many species.”

University respondents were most commonly constrained in talking about feral animals. A university respondent said:

“By being blocked from reporting on the dodgy dealings of my university with regards to my research and its outcomes I feel like I’m not doing my job properly. The university actively avoids any mention of my study species or project due to vested financial interests in some key habitat.”

Industry respondents, more than those from other sectors, were constrained in commenting on the impacts of mining, urban development and native vegetation clearing. One industry respondent said:

“A project […] clearly had unacceptable impacts on a critically endangered species […] the approvals process ignored these impacts […] Not being able to speak out meant that no one in the process was willing or able to advocate for conservation or make the public aware of the problem.”

Consequences of constraints on public commentary

Of those respondents who had communicated information publicly, 42 per cent had been harassed or criticised for doing so. Of those, 83 per cent believed the harassers were motivated by political or economic interests.

Some 77 respondents answered a question on whether they had suffered personal consequences as a result of suppressing information. Of these, 18 per cent said they had suffered mental health effects. And 21 per cent reported increased job insecurity, damage to their career, job loss, or had left the field.

One respondent said:

“I declared the (action) unsafe to proceed. I was overruled and properties and assets were impacted. I was told to be silent or never have a job again.”

Another said:

“As a consultant working for companies that damage the environment, you have to believe you are having a positive impact, but after years of observing how broken the system is, not being legally able to speak out becomes harder to deal with.”

Change is needed

We acknowledge that we receive grants involving contracts that restrict our academic freedom. And some of us self-censor to avoid risks to grants from government, resulting in personal moral conflict and a less informed public. When starting this research project, one of our colleagues declined to contribute for fear of losing funding and risking employment.

But Australia faces many complex and demanding environmental problems. It’s essential that scientists are free to communicate their knowledge on these issues.

Public servant codes of conduct should be revised to allow government scientists to speak freely about their research in both a public and private capacity. And government scientists and other staff should report to new, independent state and federal environment authorities, to minimise political and industry interference.

A free flow of information ensures government policy is backed by the best science. 

Conservation dollars would be more wisely invested, costly mistakes avoided and interventions more effectively targeted.

And importantly, it would help ensure the public is properly informed – a fundamental tenet of a flourishing democracy.

The Conversation

About the authors: Don Driscoll is a professor in terrestrial ecology at Deakin University; Bob Pressey is a professor and program leader of conservation planning at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University; Euan Ritchie, is an associate professor in wildlife ecology and conservation at the Centre for Integrative Ecology, in the School of Life and Environmental Sciences at Deakin University, and Noel D Preece is an adjunct associate professor, at James Cook University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.


Robyn Gulliver  |  @ProBonoNews

Robyn Gulliver is a postdoctoral research fellow at The University of Queensland. She researches the antecedents and consequences of environmental and pro-democracy collective action. She has developed Australia’s largest database of environmental groups, activities and campaigns alongside the ‘Campaign Explorer’ citizen science project.


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