4.7 Article

Perceptions of environmental justice and the conflict surrounding large carnivore management in Norway - Implications for conflict management

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
Volume 203, Issue -, Pages 197-206

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2016.08.041

Keywords

Environmental justice; Carnivore conservation; Human-wildlife conflict; Carnivore management and policy

Funding

  1. Research Council of Norway [251112, 212919]
  2. Norwegian Environment Agency

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Human-wildlife conflict is increasingly being recognised as containing strong elements of social conflict. The extent to which stakeholders regard a management system as being just and fair is a key social dimension of conflict. This paper investigates the perceptions of justice regarding the carnivore conflict in Norway among sheep farmers, environmentalists and indigenous reindeer herders using Qmethodology. Three significant perspectives on environmental justice were identified, which we labelled the Carnivore Advocates (containing most environmentalists), the Carnivore Sceptics (containing most of the sheep farmers and reindeer herders) and the Bureaucratic Carnivore Sceptics (containing the remaining sheep farmers and a reindeer herder). The widest disagreement was over what constitutes environmental harm and environmental goods and how the costs and benefits should be distributed, indicating that fundamental differences in values and perceptions underlie the intractability of this conflict. However, the results of this study suggest that the widespread conceptualisation of justice as strictly a matter of equitable distribution of costs and benefits is incomplete. Recognition justice, in the form of acknowledging group identity, lifestyle, knowledge and viewpoints, and seeking mutual respect for differences constituted a good in itself for all stakeholders. It cannot therefore just be viewed as a means to establish equitable distribution of goods and harms. Issues related to participatory justice were also identified, but were not attributed great importance. These results confirm the common assumption that the carnivore conflict in Norway is highly polarised. Because the two poles differ fundamentally in their value perceptions regarding carnivores and how that relates to their sense of identity, we characterise the human-wildlife conflict in Norway as a wicked problem where decisions regarding the management of carnivores is going to entail political prioritisation of one viewpoint over the other. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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