Abstract

Simple SummaryThis paper argues that animals should be positioned as subjects in research and scholarship to further develop compassionate conservation, a new field that aims to bridge conservation biology and animal welfare science. Animals can be treated as subjects by attending to their lived experiences and by recognizing their capacity to act. This paper merges interviews, blog posts, biological research, and observations to position African wild dogs as subjects in conservation research and scholarship using responsible anthropomorphism. It presents wild dogs as thinking, feeling, and sentient animals who have agency (capacity to act), and whose welfare is negatively affected by habitat loss and conflict with farmers. By positioning wild dogs as subjects, we can develop an ethical starting point for a more compassionate conservation. This ‘enriched’ scholarship allows us to more fully appreciate the complex lives of wildlife, their circumstances, and their experiences.This paper argues for a more compassionate conservation by positioning animals as subjects in research and scholarship. Compassionate conservation is a multidisciplinary field of study that broadly attends to the ethical dimensions of conservation by merging conservation biology and animal welfare science. However, animal geography is rarely discussed in the compassionate conservation scholarship despite sharing similar tenets. This paper argues that responsible anthropomorphism and animal geography concepts of animal subjectivity (lived experiences) and agency (capacity to act) positions African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus) as subjects in conservation research and scholarship. It merges biological research, public communication, and interview and participant observation data to present wild dogs as thinking, feeling, self-conscious animals with agency, and whose welfare is negatively affected in human-dominated landscapes in Botswana. This paper argues for more attention to be paid to animal subjectivity and agency to foster more compassionate relations with wildlife. It argues that positioning animals as subjects in research and scholarship is an ethical starting point for moving compassionate conservation forward. This ‘enriched’ scholarly approach moves us closer to appreciating the lives of wildlife and the complexity of their circumstances and experiences.

Highlights

  • Compassionate conservation is an emerging multidisciplinary field that broadly focuses on the ethical dimensions of conservation; compassion, in the field of compassionate conservation, is defined as “empathy in humans for non-human animals and a drive to alleviate suffering” [1](p. 270) while ethics are defined as “how we should live our lives, what ends we should seek, and whatAnimals 2019, 9, 16; doi:10.3390/ani9010016 www.mdpi.com/journal/animalsAnimals 2019, 9, 16 means we should use in pursuit of our ends” [2] (p. 281)

  • Public communication, and interview and participant observation data to present wild dogs as thinking, feeling, self-conscious animals with agency, and whose welfare is negatively affected in human-dominated landscapes in Botswana

  • Positioning animals as subjects extends theoretical and conceptual underpinnings of compassionate conservation, while at the same time contributes a multidisciplinary approach to understanding the lives of animals more fully

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Compassionate conservation is an emerging multidisciplinary field that broadly focuses on the ethical dimensions of conservation; compassion, in the field of compassionate conservation, is defined as “empathy in humans for non-human animals and a drive to alleviate suffering” [1]. We use a case study of human perceptions of and experiences with African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus) in Botswana to position animals as subjects by considering the concepts of subjectivity, agency, and welfare using responsible anthropomorphism. To consider these concepts, we bring together data from biological studies and wild dog researchers’ public communications (i.e., blog posts and reports) with animal geography methodologies (responsible anthropomorphism, semi-structured interviews, and participant observation). We conclude by arguing that a step in compassionate conservation is to pay attention to these elements in order to demonstrate that the lives of animals (wild dogs in this case) are complex and nuanced, and shaped by broader social structures and their interactions with humans

Compassionate Conservation
Animal Geography
Animal Subjectivity and Agency
Responsible Anthropomorphism
Learning about Botswana’s Wild Dogs
Wild Dog Subjectivity
Wild Dog Agency
Wild Dog Welfare
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call