Literature DB >> 32406544

The place of nature in conservation conflicts.

Guillaume Chapron1, José Vicente López-Bao2.   

Abstract

Conservation conflicts are gaining importance in contemporary conservation scholarship such that conservation may have entered a conflict hype. We attempted to uncover and deconstruct the normative assumptions behind such studies by raising several questions: what are conservation conflicts, what justifies the attention they receive, do conservation-conflict studies limit wildlife conservation, is scientific knowledge stacked against wildlife in conservation conflicts, do conservation-conflict studies adopt a specific view of democracy, can laws be used to force conservation outcomes, why is flexibility needed in managing conservation conflicts, can conservation conflicts be managed by promoting tolerance, and who needs to compromise in conservation conflicts? We suggest that many of the intellectual premises in the field may defang conservation and prevent it from truly addressing the current conservation crisis as it accelerates. By framing conservation conflicts as conflicts between people about wildlife or nature, the field insidiously transfers guilt, whereby human activities are no longer blamed for causing species decline and extinctions but conservation is instead blamed for causing social conflicts. When the focus is on mitigating social conflicts without limiting in any powerful way human activities damaging to nature, conservation-conflict studies risk keeping conservation within the limits of human activities, instead of keeping human activities within the limits of nature. For conservation to successfully stop the biodiversity crisis, we suggest the alternative goal of recognizing nature's right to existence to maintenance of ecological functions and evolutionary processes. Nature being a rights bearer or legal person would imply its needs must be explicitly taken into account in conflict adjudication. If, even in conservation, nature's interests come second to human interests, it may be no surprise that conservation cannot succeed.
© 2020 Society for Conservation Biology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  conservación de la naturaleza; especies amenazadas; grandescarnívoros; large carnivores; nature conservation; politics and policy; políticas y leyes; threatened species; 受威胁物种; 大型食肉动物; 政治与政策; 自然保护

Year:  2020        PMID: 32406544     DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13485

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Conserv Biol        ISSN: 0888-8892            Impact factor:   6.560


  3 in total

1.  Analysis of differences and commonalities in wildlife hunting across the Africa-Europe South-North gradient.

Authors:  Mona Estrella Bachmann; Lars Kulik; Tsegaye Gatiso; Martin Reinhardt Nielsen; Dagmar Haase; Marco Heurich; Ana Buchadas; Lukas Bösch; Dustin Eirdosh; Andreas Freytag; Jonas Geldmann; Arash Ghoddousi; Thurston Cleveland Hicks; Isabel Ordaz-Németh; Siyu Qin; Tenekwetche Sop; Suzanne van Beeck Calkoen; Karsten Wesche; Hjalmar S Kühl
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2022-08-30       Impact factor: 9.593

2.  Rethinking the study of human-wildlife coexistence.

Authors:  Simon Pooley; Saloni Bhatia; Anirudhkumar Vasava
Journal:  Conserv Biol       Date:  2020-10-26       Impact factor: 7.563

3.  Coexistence between human and wildlife: the nature, causes and mitigations of human wildlife conflict around Bale Mountains National Park, Southeast Ethiopia.

Authors:  Sefi Mekonen
Journal:  BMC Ecol       Date:  2020-09-14       Impact factor: 2.964

  3 in total

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