Natural Enemies: People-Wildlife Conflicts in Anthropological Perspective

Natural Enemies: People-Wildlife Conflicts in Anthropological Perspective book cover

Natural Enemies: People-Wildlife Conflicts in Anthropological Perspective

Author(s): John Knight

  • Publisher: Routledge
  • Publication Date: 14 Dec. 2000
  • Edition: 1st
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 268 pages
  • ISBN-10: 0415224403
  • ISBN-13: 9780415224406

Book Description

Wild animals raid crops, attack livestock, and sometimes threaten people. Conflicts with wildlife are widespread, assume a variety of forms, and elicit a range of human responses. Wildlife pests are frequently demonized and resisted by local communities while routinely ‘controlled’ by state authorities. However, to the great concern of conservationists, the history of many people-wildlife conflicts lies in human encroachment into wildlife territory.
In
Natural Enemies the authors place the analytical focus on the human dimension of these conflicts – an area often neglected by specialists in applied ecology and wildlife management – and on their social and political contexts. Case studies of specific conflicts are drawn from Africa, Asia, Europe and America, and feature an assortment of wild animals, including chimpanzees, elephants, wild pigs, foxes, bears, wolves, pigeons and ducks.
These anthropologists challenge the narrow utilitarian view of wildlife pestilence by revealing the cultural character of many of our ‘natural enemies’. Their reports from the ‘front-line’ expose one fact – human conflict with wildlife is often an expression of conflict between people.

Editorial Reviews

About the Author

John Knight is Lecturer at the School of Anthropological Studies, Queen’s University of Belfast. Since 1987 he has regularly carried out field research in Japanese mountain villages and has published widely on various subjects related to rural Japan, including wildlife.

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