TY - JOUR
T1 - Coexistence beyond disciplinary silos
T2 - Five dimensions of analysis for more convivial human-predator interactions
AU - Krauss, Judith E.
AU - Fiasco, Valentina
AU - Marchini, Silvio
AU - McInturff, Alex
AU - Sandroni, Laila T.
AU - Alagona, Peter S.
AU - Brockington, Dan
AU - Büscher, Bram
AU - Duffy, Rosaleen
AU - de Barros Ferraz, Katia Maria P.M.
AU - Fletcher, Rob
AU - Kiwango, Wilhelm Andrew
AU - Komi, Sanna
AU - Mabele, Mathew Bukhi
AU - Massarella, Kate
AU - Nygren, Anja
PY - 2025/8
Y1 - 2025/8
N2 - Understanding human-predator interactions has been a central goal of conservation for decades, yet many previous efforts have approached this challenge from disciplinary perspectives focused on single case studies. There is a need for more transdisciplinary and multi-sited research to enrich our understandings of the complexity of human-nonhuman interactions and to design ways to make them more convivial. The multi-year CONVIVA “convivial conservation” research project addressed this gap, involving scholars from natural sciences, social sciences and humanities to promote coexistence, biodiversity and justice in conservation across four diverse case studies of apex predators: jaguars in Brazil, wolves in Finland, lions in Tanzania, and brown bears in California, United States. In this article, we set out two key contributions. First, we highlight how our project created iterative, dialogue-based reflections amongst different disciplines and perspectives to inform research questions, methods and units of analysis, fulfilling what we see as a key need in the literature. Second, we operationalise our collaboration beyond disciplinary silos into a novel framework of five interconnected dimensions of analysis, that characterise human-predator interactions, drawing on a range of lenses and including a series of guiding questions. We also showcase empirical material from our cases across wildlife, environment, interactions, institutions and justice dimensions. We present our approach, framework and findings with collective reflections and an invitation for adaptation and further research on their suitability to other contexts and species.
AB - Understanding human-predator interactions has been a central goal of conservation for decades, yet many previous efforts have approached this challenge from disciplinary perspectives focused on single case studies. There is a need for more transdisciplinary and multi-sited research to enrich our understandings of the complexity of human-nonhuman interactions and to design ways to make them more convivial. The multi-year CONVIVA “convivial conservation” research project addressed this gap, involving scholars from natural sciences, social sciences and humanities to promote coexistence, biodiversity and justice in conservation across four diverse case studies of apex predators: jaguars in Brazil, wolves in Finland, lions in Tanzania, and brown bears in California, United States. In this article, we set out two key contributions. First, we highlight how our project created iterative, dialogue-based reflections amongst different disciplines and perspectives to inform research questions, methods and units of analysis, fulfilling what we see as a key need in the literature. Second, we operationalise our collaboration beyond disciplinary silos into a novel framework of five interconnected dimensions of analysis, that characterise human-predator interactions, drawing on a range of lenses and including a series of guiding questions. We also showcase empirical material from our cases across wildlife, environment, interactions, institutions and justice dimensions. We present our approach, framework and findings with collective reflections and an invitation for adaptation and further research on their suitability to other contexts and species.
KW - Apex predators
KW - Coexistence
KW - Convivial conservation
KW - Human-predator interactions
KW - Transdisciplinary framework
U2 - 10.1016/j.biocon.2025.111145
DO - 10.1016/j.biocon.2025.111145
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105006788578
SN - 0006-3207
VL - 308
JO - Biological Conservation
JF - Biological Conservation
M1 - 111145
ER -