Broadening the spectrum of conflict and coexistence: A case study example of human-wolf interactions in British Columbia, Canada.

Coexistence has seen an explosive rise within conservation social science scholarship. While this represents an exciting shift in the field, many academics are still skeptical. Some scholars have expressed concerns around the omission of "conflict", naïveté, and impracticality associated w...

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Main Authors: Ethan D Doney, Beatrice Frank, Douglas A Clark
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0318566
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author Ethan D Doney
Beatrice Frank
Douglas A Clark
author_facet Ethan D Doney
Beatrice Frank
Douglas A Clark
author_sort Ethan D Doney
collection DOAJ
description Coexistence has seen an explosive rise within conservation social science scholarship. While this represents an exciting shift in the field, many academics are still skeptical. Some scholars have expressed concerns around the omission of "conflict", naïveté, and impracticality associated with coexistence literature. In this paper, we aim to demonstrate that critiques of coexistence often stem from reductionism and decontextualization, process inefficiencies and/or inequities, failure to address and prioritize human well-being as a goal, and a lack of tools to foster open, collaborative dialogue. We draw on a case study of human-wolf interactions in the Pacific Rim National Park Reserve Region, British Columbia, Canada, to illustrate how coexistence efforts can, and should, prioritize "conflict", be attentive to the real challenges of sharing spaces with wildlife, and encourage collaborative, inclusive processes that work toward tangible, actionable outcomes. We conducted 32 semi-structured interviews with residents from diverse backgrounds and levels of experience with wolves in the region. From these interviews, we articulated novel, co-developed, contextual definitions of human-wolf conflict and coexistence in the region. We then developed a collaborative tool for visualizing behavioral and cognitive elements of human-wildlife interactions through open and inclusive dialogue, using real examples from these research interviews. The research findings highlight three main principles: (1) that conflict and coexistence are contextual and should be understood as such, (2) that coexistence requires collaborative processes that pay attention to equity and inclusivity, and (3) that there are frameworks or tools that can help facilitate discussions toward practical outcomes of coexistence projects. We believe that this paper helps to disambiguate coexistence and reinforce that coexistence requires focused attention to the well-being of people as much as wildlife.
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spelling doaj-art-5a6434c7b2c54658857f32351ea0863d2025-02-12T05:31:05ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01202e031856610.1371/journal.pone.0318566Broadening the spectrum of conflict and coexistence: A case study example of human-wolf interactions in British Columbia, Canada.Ethan D DoneyBeatrice FrankDouglas A ClarkCoexistence has seen an explosive rise within conservation social science scholarship. While this represents an exciting shift in the field, many academics are still skeptical. Some scholars have expressed concerns around the omission of "conflict", naïveté, and impracticality associated with coexistence literature. In this paper, we aim to demonstrate that critiques of coexistence often stem from reductionism and decontextualization, process inefficiencies and/or inequities, failure to address and prioritize human well-being as a goal, and a lack of tools to foster open, collaborative dialogue. We draw on a case study of human-wolf interactions in the Pacific Rim National Park Reserve Region, British Columbia, Canada, to illustrate how coexistence efforts can, and should, prioritize "conflict", be attentive to the real challenges of sharing spaces with wildlife, and encourage collaborative, inclusive processes that work toward tangible, actionable outcomes. We conducted 32 semi-structured interviews with residents from diverse backgrounds and levels of experience with wolves in the region. From these interviews, we articulated novel, co-developed, contextual definitions of human-wolf conflict and coexistence in the region. We then developed a collaborative tool for visualizing behavioral and cognitive elements of human-wildlife interactions through open and inclusive dialogue, using real examples from these research interviews. The research findings highlight three main principles: (1) that conflict and coexistence are contextual and should be understood as such, (2) that coexistence requires collaborative processes that pay attention to equity and inclusivity, and (3) that there are frameworks or tools that can help facilitate discussions toward practical outcomes of coexistence projects. We believe that this paper helps to disambiguate coexistence and reinforce that coexistence requires focused attention to the well-being of people as much as wildlife.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0318566
spellingShingle Ethan D Doney
Beatrice Frank
Douglas A Clark
Broadening the spectrum of conflict and coexistence: A case study example of human-wolf interactions in British Columbia, Canada.
PLoS ONE
title Broadening the spectrum of conflict and coexistence: A case study example of human-wolf interactions in British Columbia, Canada.
title_full Broadening the spectrum of conflict and coexistence: A case study example of human-wolf interactions in British Columbia, Canada.
title_fullStr Broadening the spectrum of conflict and coexistence: A case study example of human-wolf interactions in British Columbia, Canada.
title_full_unstemmed Broadening the spectrum of conflict and coexistence: A case study example of human-wolf interactions in British Columbia, Canada.
title_short Broadening the spectrum of conflict and coexistence: A case study example of human-wolf interactions in British Columbia, Canada.
title_sort broadening the spectrum of conflict and coexistence a case study example of human wolf interactions in british columbia canada
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0318566
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