A social network analysis of an epistemic community studying neoliberal conservation

dc.contributor.authorBunce, Brittany
dc.contributor.authorApostolopoulou, Elia
dc.contributor.authorAndres, Sara Maestre
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-26T10:37:35Z
dc.date.available2026-01-26T10:37:35Z
dc.date.issued2025
dc.description.abstractResearchers typically operate in epistemic communities: groups that share common approaches to research agendas and sociopolitical action and define areas of debate. Although productive in their own spheres, a lack of understanding among these communities can undermine scientific progress. Thus, analyzing epistemic communities is important for understanding the politics of knowledge production. Social network analysis sheds light on these dynamics by mapping the collaborative networks that shape academic output. We used 255 publications examined in Apostolopoulou et al.’s review of neoliberal conservation literature and 2135 additional publications in a social network analysis. We compiled a coauthorship network for 318 authors and found a dispersed and polycentric network with low connectivity and relatively small clusters of scholars collaborating within tightly knit groups. Although the structure is conducive to innovation and diversity, building new connections among dispersed coauthor groups could enrich knowledge sharing to drive novel approaches. We identified central actors in building collaborations among communities and communicating ideas across the network. We considered actor attributes, such as gender and geographic location, alongside centrality measures. We found that seventy percent of the 20 authors with the highest betweenness centrality were men, and only one male author was affiliated to an institution in the Global South. Our analysis of thematic clusters in the literature highlighted the spatial patchiness and partialness of the literature across different subfields. Scholars should undertake more work on identified themes in currently excluded geographic regions through effective interdisciplinary collaborations and with local communities of research and practice and grassroots movements. There is a need to strengthen the field's intellectual diversity and to have a deeper engagement with issues of class, gender, and race. This would allow neoliberal conservation to reimagine conservation in ways that are not only environmentally sustainable, but also socially just.
dc.identifier.citationBunce, B., Apostolopoulou, E., Andres, S.M., Choy, A.P., Requena‐i‐Mora, M. and Brockington, D., 2025. A social network analysis of an epistemic community studying neoliberal conservation. Conservation biology, 39(2), p.e70001.
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.70001
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10566/21849
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherJohn Wiley and Sons Inc
dc.subjectcoauthorship network analysis
dc.subjectconservation social science
dc.subjectepistemic communities
dc.subjectneoliberal conservation
dc.subjectsocial network analysis
dc.titleA social network analysis of an epistemic community studying neoliberal conservation
dc.typeArticle

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