Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- 1 The impact of human–wildlife conflict on natural systems
- 2 The impact of human–wildlife conflict on human lives and livelihoods
- 3 Characterization and prevention of attacks on humans
- 4 Non-lethal techniques for reducing depredation
- 5 Techniques to reduce crop loss: human and technical dimensions in Africa
- 6 Evaluating lethal control in the management of human–wildlife conflict
- 7 Bearing the costs of human–wildlife conflict: the challenges of compensation schemes
- 8 Increasing the value of wildlife through non-consumptive use? Deconstructing the myths of ecotourism and community-based tourism in the tropics
- 9 Does extractive use provide opportunities to offset conflicts between people and wildlife?
- 10 Zoning as a means of mitigating conflicts with large carnivores: principles and reality
- 11 From conflict to coexistence: a case study of geese and agriculture in Scotland
- 12 Hen harriers and red grouse: the ecology of a conflict
- 13 Understanding and resolving the black-tailed prairie dog conservation challenge
- 14 People and elephants in the Shimba Hills, Kenya
- 15 Safari hunting and conservation on communal land in southern Africa
- 16 Socio-ecological factors shaping local support for wildlife: crop-raiding by elephants and other wildlife in Africa
- 17 Jaguars and livestock: living with the world's third largest cat
- 18 People and predators in Laikipia District, Kenya
- 19 Searching for the coexistence recipe: a case study of conflicts between people and tigers in the Russian Far East
- 20 A tale of two countries: large carnivore depredation and compensation schemes in Sweden and Norway
- 21 Managing wolf–human conflict in the northwestern United States
- 22 Policies for reducing human–wildlife conflict: a Kenya case study
- 23 An ecology-based policy framework for human–tiger coexistence in India
- 24 The future of coexistence: resolving human–wildlife conflicts in a changing world
- References
- Index
9 - Does extractive use provide opportunities to offset conflicts between people and wildlife?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- 1 The impact of human–wildlife conflict on natural systems
- 2 The impact of human–wildlife conflict on human lives and livelihoods
- 3 Characterization and prevention of attacks on humans
- 4 Non-lethal techniques for reducing depredation
- 5 Techniques to reduce crop loss: human and technical dimensions in Africa
- 6 Evaluating lethal control in the management of human–wildlife conflict
- 7 Bearing the costs of human–wildlife conflict: the challenges of compensation schemes
- 8 Increasing the value of wildlife through non-consumptive use? Deconstructing the myths of ecotourism and community-based tourism in the tropics
- 9 Does extractive use provide opportunities to offset conflicts between people and wildlife?
- 10 Zoning as a means of mitigating conflicts with large carnivores: principles and reality
- 11 From conflict to coexistence: a case study of geese and agriculture in Scotland
- 12 Hen harriers and red grouse: the ecology of a conflict
- 13 Understanding and resolving the black-tailed prairie dog conservation challenge
- 14 People and elephants in the Shimba Hills, Kenya
- 15 Safari hunting and conservation on communal land in southern Africa
- 16 Socio-ecological factors shaping local support for wildlife: crop-raiding by elephants and other wildlife in Africa
- 17 Jaguars and livestock: living with the world's third largest cat
- 18 People and predators in Laikipia District, Kenya
- 19 Searching for the coexistence recipe: a case study of conflicts between people and tigers in the Russian Far East
- 20 A tale of two countries: large carnivore depredation and compensation schemes in Sweden and Norway
- 21 Managing wolf–human conflict in the northwestern United States
- 22 Policies for reducing human–wildlife conflict: a Kenya case study
- 23 An ecology-based policy framework for human–tiger coexistence in India
- 24 The future of coexistence: resolving human–wildlife conflicts in a changing world
- References
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
The use of wildlife remains in something of a cleft stick as a possible solution to contemporary problems in conservation (Hutton and Leader-Williams, 2003), such as offsetting the costs of conflict between people and wildlife. On the one hand, the list of abuses suffered by many species of wildlife when used commercially seems endless (Milner-Gulland and Mace 1998; Bennett and Robinson 2000). At the same time, the Convention on Biological Diversity promotes the role of sustainable use in providing people with the necessary incentives to conserve biodiversity on land, which ultimately requires decisions about the opportunity costs of different forms of land use (McNeely 1988, Swanson 1994; Hutton and Leader-Williams 2003; Convention on Biological Diversity 2005).
The Convention on Biological Diversity has, nevertheless, based its aspirations on situations where wise use has led to positive incentives for conservation. For example, the catastrophic losses of native species after the colonization of North America led sportsmen to protect their interests in the early and mid nineteenth century, by seeking to reduce the numbers of game animals killed and establish preserves (Gray 1993). Sportsmen who fished and hunted for pleasure, rather than for commerce or necessity, became one spearhead for formal policies to conserve wildlife and its habitats (Reiger 1986; Jackson 1996). Likewise, following the colonization of Africa, formal conservation policies in many countries in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century sought to regulate hunting and to establish game reserves (MacKenzie 1988; Leader-Williams 2000), and subsequently in southern Africa to re-establish species on private land to create further hunting opportunities (Bothma 2002; Lewis and Jackson, Chapter 15).
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- People and Wildlife, Conflict or Co-existence? , pp. 140 - 161Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005
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