Coexistence between people and polar bears supports Indigenous knowledge mobilization in wildlife management and research
Katharina M. Miller,
No information about this author
Georgina Berg,
No information about this author
Georgina Berg
No information about this author
et al.
Communications Earth & Environment,
Journal Year:
2025,
Volume and Issue:
6(1)
Published: Jan. 31, 2025
Language: Английский
Living with wildlife: a review of advances in social-ecological analysis across landscapes
Vanessa Hull,
No information about this author
Xiaoxing Bian,
No information about this author
Diane J. Episcopio‐Sturgeon
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et al.
Landscape Ecology,
Journal Year:
2023,
Volume and Issue:
38(12), P. 4385 - 4402
Published: Oct. 5, 2023
Language: Английский
Reply to Comment on ‘In complexity we trust: learning from the socialist calculation debate for ecosystem management’
Environmental Research Letters,
Journal Year:
2023,
Volume and Issue:
19(1), P. 018001 - 018001
Published: Dec. 5, 2023
Language: Английский
“Bears are like family”: Indigenous knowledge of human-polar bear coexistence amidst rapid social-ecological change
Katharina M. Miller,
No information about this author
Georgina Berg,
No information about this author
Indigenous Knowledge Keepers of Churchill
No information about this author
et al.
Research Square (Research Square),
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
unknown
Published: Aug. 13, 2024
Abstract
Polar
bears
are
coming
into
northern
communities
more
frequently,
and
human-polar
bear
conflict
is
increasing.
However,
in
the
community
of
Churchill,
Manitoba,
people
live
alongside
polar
with
high
tolerance
reciprocal
respect.
Through
this
case
study,
we
explored
human–polar
coexistence
through
Indigenous
voices,
documented
change,
provided
recommendations
as
future
visions
to
inform
inclusive
management
research
strategies:
elevate
knowledge,
support
proactive
less
invasive
research,
cultivate
a
culture
coexistence,
improve
education
safety
awareness,
protect
tourism.
We
used
community-based
participatory
coproduction
hands
back,
forward,
storytelling,
mixing
methods
from
social
sciences
ways
knowing.
Our
study
revealed
may
be
tool
bridge
ecological
examine
facilitate
wildlife
conservation,
promote
well-being
applied
on
global
issues
at
local
level.
Language: Английский