Social media data for environmental sustainability: A critical review of opportunities, threats, and ethical use

Social media data are transforming sustainability science. However, challenges from restrictions in data accessibility and ethical concerns regarding potential data misuse have threatened this nascent field. Here, we review the literature on the use of social media data in environmental and sustaina...

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Veröffentlicht in:One earth (Cambridge, Mass.) Mass.), 2023-03, Vol.6 (3), p.236-250
Hauptverfasser: Ghermandi, Andrea, Langemeyer, Johannes, Van Berkel, Derek, Calcagni, Fulvia, Depietri, Yaella, Egarter Vigl, Lukas, Fox, Nathan, Havinga, Ilan, Jäger, Hieronymus, Kaiser, Nina, Karasov, Oleksandr, McPhearson, Timon, Podschun, Simone, Ruiz-Frau, Ana, Sinclair, Michael, Venohr, Markus, Wood, Spencer A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Social media data are transforming sustainability science. However, challenges from restrictions in data accessibility and ethical concerns regarding potential data misuse have threatened this nascent field. Here, we review the literature on the use of social media data in environmental and sustainability research. We find that they can play a novel and irreplaceable role in achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals by allowing a nuanced understanding of human-nature interactions at scale, observing the dynamics of social-ecological change, and investigating the co-construction of nature values. We reveal threats to data access and highlight scientific responsibility to address trade-offs between research transparency and privacy protection, while promoting inclusivity. This contributes to a wider societal debate of social media data for sustainability science and for the common good. Social media data are transforming environmental and sustainability sciences, but restrictions in accessibility and ethical concerns threaten this nascent field. Our review finds that they can play a unique role in achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals. We reveal threats to data access and highlight scientific responsibility to address trade-offs between research transparency and privacy protection, while promoting inclusivity. This contributes to a wider societal debate of social media data for sustainability science and for the common good.
ISSN:2590-3322
2590-3330
2590-3322
DOI:10.1016/j.oneear.2023.02.008