Abstract

ABSTRACT While the international conservation discourse is making the case for reframing human-wildlife interactions from human-wildlife conflict (HWC) to coexistence, the latter remains an elusive goal for countries in the Global South grappling with escalated frequency and severity of HWC. Cohabitating in the same landscape as priority conservation species, it has been a fait accompli for poor and marginalized communities in India to bear the disproportionate burden of HWC with serious implications on their lives and well-being as well as for the realization of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). We make the case that while HWC has typically been framed as a conservation issue, it also merits equal attention as a serious sustainable development issue requiring an extension of the rights-based approach to its management. This is critical for achieving coexistence as well as in the interests of justice and the central promise to “leave no one behind” of the SDGs.

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