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A standardized definition of rapid evidence assessment for environmental applications

Evidence assessment is important for environmental decision-making but can be slow and resource intensive. This article presents a standardized definition of rapid evidence assessment for environmental applications, developed through a consensus-driven and iterative process to enhance consistency, transparency, and confidence in the method.

Biljana Macura / Published on 17 February 2026

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Citation

Webb, J. A., Schofield, K. A., Cook, C. N., Fisher, J. R. B., Cheng, S. H., Christie, A., Cooke, S. J., Dubois, N. S., Frampton, G., Macura, B., Nichols, S. J., Richards, R., Aicher, R. J., Mason, S., Anderson, E., Betley, E., Borsuk, M., Busch, J., Carlson, S., … Ridley, C. E. (2026). A standardized definition of rapid evidence assessment for environmental applications. Conservation Letters, 19(1), e70005. https://doi.org/10.1111/con4.70005

Evidence assessment—identifying, evaluating, and synthesizing data and findings from previous studies—is important to inform environmental decision-making but can be slow and resource intensive. Users seeking efficiency have developed multiple definitions and methods for rapid evidence assessment (REA), raising concerns about consistency and rigor. To improve consistency and confidence in REA, the authors convened an international group of evidence users and researchers to define REA for environmental applications. Through a consensus-driven and iterative approach, they define REA as: a structured review process that aims to maximize rigor and objectivity given assessment needs and resource constraints; is transparent about trade-offs, risks, and biases; and can integrate multiple types of evidence. Their standardized definition of REA will improve transparency and facilitate decisions about the appropriate levels of rigor required for those who commission, conduct, and use REAs for environmental decision-making.

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Biljana Macura
Biljana Macura

Senior Research Fellow

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Conservation Letters Open access
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