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International Journal of Wildland Fire International Journal of Wildland Fire Society
Journal of the International Association of Wildland Fire
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Mapping the ethical landscape of wildland fire management: setting an agendum for research and deliberation on the applied ethics of wildland fire

Dyllan Goldstein A and Eric B. Kennedy B *
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Emergency Management & Disaster Science, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND, USA.

B Disaster & Emergency Management, School of Administrative Studies, York University, Toronto, ON, Canada.

* Correspondence to: ebk@yorku.ca

International Journal of Wildland Fire 31(10) 911-917 https://doi.org/10.1071/WF22020
Submitted: 8 April 2021  Accepted: 17 August 2022   Published: 16 September 2022

© 2022 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of IAWF.

Abstract

Background: Virtually every decision within wildland fire management includes substantial ethical dimensions. As pressures increase with ever-growing fires, it is becoming increasingly important to develop tools for assessing and acting on the values intrinsic to wildfire management.

Aims: This paper aims to foster an applied ethics of wildland fire by bringing values to the forefront of wildland fire management debates, highlighting areas where ethical issues have been previously discussed, and providing a framework to assist in future discussion.

Methods: Through a literature review and collaborative thematic coding of a large set of ethical dilemmas, a list of ethical lenses was developed.

Key results: Five ethical lenses were generated from the thematic coding process: Epistemologies and Representation, Values and Priorities, Risk and Uncertainty, Power, and Metaethics.

Conclusion: The five lenses provide a framework to identify prospective ethical tensions in wildland fire decision-making, both within and cutting across categories. This framework provides a way of structuring future investigations into wildfire ethics, as well as a starting point for developing techniques to integrate community and stakeholder values.

Implications: Developing a field of applied ethics for wildland fire will help support decision-making, create space to more inclusively reflect and deliberate on values, and ensure that fire management best serves the public interest.

Keywords: decision-making, ethics, planning, policy, priorities, values, wildfire, wildfire management, wildland fire.


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