Conservation Letters (May 2021)

Measuring the intensity of conflicts in conservation

  • Jeremy J. Cusack,
  • Tom Bradfer‐Lawrence,
  • Zachary Baynham‐Herd,
  • Sofia Castelló y Tickell,
  • Isla Duporge,
  • Håvard Hegre,
  • Lara Moreno Zárate,
  • Vincent Naude,
  • Sahil Nijhawan,
  • John Wilson,
  • Dario Gerardo Zambrano Cortes,
  • Nils Bunnefeld

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.12783
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Conflicts between the interests of biodiversity conservation and other human activities pose a major threat to natural ecosystems and human well‐being, yet few methods exist to quantify their intensity and model their dynamics. We develop a categorization of conflict intensity based on the curve of conflict, a model originally used to track the escalation and deescalation of armed conflicts. Our categorization assigns six intensity levels reflecting the discourse and actions of stakeholders involved in a given conflict, from coexistence or collaboration to physical violence. Using a range of case studies, we demonstrate the value of our approach in quantifying conflict trends, estimating transition probabilities between conflict stages, and modeling conflict intensity as a function of relevant covariates. By taking an evidence‐based approach to quantifying stakeholder behavior, the proposed framework allows for a better understanding of the drivers of conservation conflict development across a diverse range of socioecological scenarios.

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