Litcius/Paper detail

Convivial Conservation from the Bottom Up

Svetoslava Toncheva, Robert Fletcher, Esther Turnhout

2021Conservation and Society27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article describes a case of human-bear cohabitation in the Rodopi mountains (Yagodina-Trigrad area) of Bulgaria. The lack of protected areas in the region and the increasing number of brown bears ( Ursus arctos ) have resulted in both human-wildlife conflicts and the development of mechanisms and practices to facilitate cohabitation in the absence of formal rules to regulate coexistence of human and nonhuman species. However, these mechanisms and practices are currently undergoing transformations due to newfound protection of the species under national and EU legislation, respectively. The paper explores these dynamics through a case study of relatively successful cohabitation in the region. Our analysis identifies and outlines local adaptation and conservation mechanisms developed to live with bears as well as strategies to benefit from the bears’ presence. In this way, the study contributes to current debates concerning how to best facilitate ‘convivial conservation’ promoting coexistence between humans and wildlife by identifying factors in this case that have facilitated a bottom-up approach to cohabitation that might be tested or adopted for use in similar situations elsewhere.

Topics & Concepts

CohabitationLegislationWildlifeAdaptation (eye)Political scienceGeographyEnvironmental planningSociologyEnvironmental resource managementEcologyBiologyLawEconomicsNeuroscienceWildlife Ecology and ConservationGeographies of human-animal interactionsHuman-Animal Interaction Studies
Convivial Conservation from the Bottom Up | Litcius