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Peace in the valley? Qualitative insights on collaborative coexistence from the Wood River Wolf Project
by
Martin, Jeff Vance
in
adaptive governance
/ American West
/ Animal populations
/ Archives & records
/ Biodiversity
/ Case studies
/ Coexistence
/ Collaboration
/ convivial conservation
/ Domestic animals
/ Ecological effects
/ environmental conflict
/ Environmental organizations
/ Government agencies
/ gray wolves
/ Human-environment relationship
/ human–wildlife conflict
/ Keystone species
/ Livestock
/ livestock depredation
/ Livestock production
/ National parks
/ predator coexistence
/ Predators
/ Qualitative research
/ Regional development
/ Rivers
/ Social sciences
/ Sustainability
/ Wildlife
/ Wildlife conservation
/ wildlife management
/ wolf reintroduction
/ Wolves
2021
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Peace in the valley? Qualitative insights on collaborative coexistence from the Wood River Wolf Project
by
Martin, Jeff Vance
in
adaptive governance
/ American West
/ Animal populations
/ Archives & records
/ Biodiversity
/ Case studies
/ Coexistence
/ Collaboration
/ convivial conservation
/ Domestic animals
/ Ecological effects
/ environmental conflict
/ Environmental organizations
/ Government agencies
/ gray wolves
/ Human-environment relationship
/ human–wildlife conflict
/ Keystone species
/ Livestock
/ livestock depredation
/ Livestock production
/ National parks
/ predator coexistence
/ Predators
/ Qualitative research
/ Regional development
/ Rivers
/ Social sciences
/ Sustainability
/ Wildlife
/ Wildlife conservation
/ wildlife management
/ wolf reintroduction
/ Wolves
2021
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Do you wish to request the book?
Peace in the valley? Qualitative insights on collaborative coexistence from the Wood River Wolf Project
by
Martin, Jeff Vance
in
adaptive governance
/ American West
/ Animal populations
/ Archives & records
/ Biodiversity
/ Case studies
/ Coexistence
/ Collaboration
/ convivial conservation
/ Domestic animals
/ Ecological effects
/ environmental conflict
/ Environmental organizations
/ Government agencies
/ gray wolves
/ Human-environment relationship
/ human–wildlife conflict
/ Keystone species
/ Livestock
/ livestock depredation
/ Livestock production
/ National parks
/ predator coexistence
/ Predators
/ Qualitative research
/ Regional development
/ Rivers
/ Social sciences
/ Sustainability
/ Wildlife
/ Wildlife conservation
/ wildlife management
/ wolf reintroduction
/ Wolves
2021
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Peace in the valley? Qualitative insights on collaborative coexistence from the Wood River Wolf Project
Journal Article
Peace in the valley? Qualitative insights on collaborative coexistence from the Wood River Wolf Project
2021
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Overview
Threats posed by wild predators to livestock production have too often resulted in human–wildlife conflict, to the detriment of these keystone species and broader biodiversity conservation. Long‐standard practices of lethal control are increasingly seen as costly, controversial, and ineffective, however, with nonlethal alternatives ever more prominent. In addition to assessing these tools' ecological effectiveness, there remains a key role for the social sciences, particularly qualitative research, in identifying obstacles to and opportunities for the long‐term sustainability and scaling up of these coexistence interventions. The Wood River Wolf Project (WRWP), a collaboration among ranchers, environmental organizations, and government agencies in Blaine County, Idaho, has pursued coexistence between gray wolves and domestic sheep since 2008, demonstrating and developing nonlethal techniques and garnering regional and international attention as a model for collaborative coexistence. Yet the Project has also struggled with changing conditions and internal challenges. Investigation of this prominent effort—its history and practices as well as the broader socio‐political and economic context—highlights the challenges of adaptive governance in the face of reduced capacity and hostile legal‐political contexts, while providing important insights for practitioners and policymakers promoting wildlife coexistence in shared landscapes.
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Ltd,John Wiley & Sons, Inc,Wiley
Subject
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