2021
DOI: 10.3389/fcosc.2021.711019
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The Arts of Coexistence: A View From Anthropology

Abstract: In this perspectives essay, I propose some ways in which current thinking in anthropology might inform the emergent cross-disciplinary field of coexistence studies. I do so following recent calls from within the conservation science community (including this special issue), acknowledging that understanding human-wildlife coexistence in the fractured landscapes of the Anthropocene1 requires being open to alternative approaches beyond conventional frameworks of conservation science and management (see for instan… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…In this article, we explore the complexity of living with diseases through the different sets of knowledge, values and meanings associated with the coexistence of humans, livestock, wildlife and pathogens. Particularly in this context, we agree with anthropologist Schroer that the study of coexistence needs to focus on ‘relations and the practices that sustain them’ (2021: 3, emphasis in original). Working in this vein, Porter (2013), in her study of bird flu management in Vietnam, shows how humans-with-animals are the subject of forms of government that aim to optimize coexistence.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 60%
“…In this article, we explore the complexity of living with diseases through the different sets of knowledge, values and meanings associated with the coexistence of humans, livestock, wildlife and pathogens. Particularly in this context, we agree with anthropologist Schroer that the study of coexistence needs to focus on ‘relations and the practices that sustain them’ (2021: 3, emphasis in original). Working in this vein, Porter (2013), in her study of bird flu management in Vietnam, shows how humans-with-animals are the subject of forms of government that aim to optimize coexistence.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 60%
“…Although the sheer act of factoring in animal judgments in human-wildlife encounters is likely considered too radical by most, it is essential to challenge the notion that cash incentives alone will encourage coexistence, as opposed to possibilities for living close to wildlife. As observed by Pooley (2022) and Schroer (2021), what might conservation come to look like should animals be seen as having knowledge about landscapes, being members of coconstitutive communities, and being individuals with distinct personalities and life experiences. This also implies that how humans experience, engage, and relate to wild animals is determined by the distinct ways in which humans and animals mutually conceive each other.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, several of ongoing discourses on human–wildlife coexistence continue to focus on known examples of conflict, including studies of human interaction with elephants (Thekaekara et al., 2022), tigers (Inskip et al., 2016), and bears (Bhattacharyya & Slocombe, 2017). Also, much‐existing work positions human–wildlife coexistence as a problem in need of intervention, based on incomplete definitions and generic interpretations of tolerance as the primary focus (Pooley, 2022; Schroer, 2021). Thus, deeper meanings and expressions of coexistence and its extension into an understanding of anthropogenic wilderness remain broadly unrecognized.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%