TY - JOUR
T1 - Environmentalities of Coexistence with Wolves in the Cantabrian Mountains of Spain
AU - Marino, Agnese
AU - Blanco, Juan
AU - Cortes-Vazquez, Jose
AU - Lopez-Bao, Jose
AU - Bosch, Anna
AU - Durant, Sarah
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/10
Y1 - 2022/10
N2 - Coexistence between humans and large carnivores is mediated by diverse values and interactions. We focus on four sites in the Cantabrian Mountains of Spain with a history of continuous wolf presence to examine how perceptions of coexistence vary across contexts. We conducted semi-structured and informal interviews with livestock farmers (n = 271), hunters (n = 157), and local community members (n = 60) to collect quantitative and qualitative data on people's experiences of coexistence with wolves. We use an environmentality framework to analyse approaches to wolf governance across sites and explore how local resource users perceive, negotiate, and respond to different governance approaches. Our analysis is firstly structured around coexistence subjectivities associated with pastoralist and hunter cultures. These encompass ambivalent and multi-layered relations founded on notions of reciprocity with nature and on resource users' roles as producers and land stewards. Secondly, we explore encounters between local cultures, interests, and environmental regulations in the context of different site-based environmentalities. The framework we adopt enables coexistence to be conceived as a space of competing knowledges and practices, arising from everyday embodied interactions with wolves and the cultural politics through which local communities negotiate different ways of governing, knowing, and relating to nature.
AB - Coexistence between humans and large carnivores is mediated by diverse values and interactions. We focus on four sites in the Cantabrian Mountains of Spain with a history of continuous wolf presence to examine how perceptions of coexistence vary across contexts. We conducted semi-structured and informal interviews with livestock farmers (n = 271), hunters (n = 157), and local community members (n = 60) to collect quantitative and qualitative data on people's experiences of coexistence with wolves. We use an environmentality framework to analyse approaches to wolf governance across sites and explore how local resource users perceive, negotiate, and respond to different governance approaches. Our analysis is firstly structured around coexistence subjectivities associated with pastoralist and hunter cultures. These encompass ambivalent and multi-layered relations founded on notions of reciprocity with nature and on resource users' roles as producers and land stewards. Secondly, we explore encounters between local cultures, interests, and environmental regulations in the context of different site-based environmentalities. The framework we adopt enables coexistence to be conceived as a space of competing knowledges and practices, arising from everyday embodied interactions with wolves and the cultural politics through which local communities negotiate different ways of governing, knowing, and relating to nature.
KW - Canis lupus
KW - Coexistence
KW - Environmentality
KW - Human-wildlife Conflict
KW - Large Carnivores
KW - Wolves
KW - Canis lupus
KW - Coexistence
KW - Environmentality
KW - Human-wildlife Conflict
KW - Large Carnivores
KW - Wolves
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85142812771
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/c133e48b-4f23-3783-bdc0-bb4e41d930ce/
UR - https://portalrecerca.uab.cat/en/publications/676e35ce-40e0-4a33-9e17-69106ed4bc1c
U2 - 10.4103/cs.cs_66_21
DO - 10.4103/cs.cs_66_21
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85142812771
SN - 0972-4923
VL - 20
SP - 345
EP - 357
JO - Conservation & Society (Print)
JF - Conservation & Society (Print)
IS - 4
ER -