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12. Why Individuals Matter: Lessons in Animal Welfare and Conservation

© 2019 University of Chicago Press

© 2019 University of Chicago Press

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents vii
  3. Foreword xi
  4. Preface: Who Lives, Who Dies, and Why It Shouldn’t Be All about Us xiii
  5. Acknowledgments xxix
  6. Part One Ethics, Conservation, and Animal Protection
  7. Trying to Make Difficult Decisions Easier 3
  8. 1. The Infirm Ethical Foundations of Conservation 9
  9. 2. Venturing beyond the Tyranny of Small Differences: The Animal Protection Movement, Conservation, and Environmental Education 27
  10. 3. Ecocide and the Extinction of Animal Minds 45
  11. 4. Talking about Bushmeat 63
  12. 5 Conservation, Animal Rights, and Human Welfare: A Pragmatic View of the “Bushmeat Crisis” 77
  13. Part Two: Conservation Behavior and “Enlightened Management”
  14. Guidelines for Restoring, Recreating, and Redecorating Nature 97
  15. 6. Why We Really Don’t Care about the Evidence in Evidence- Based Decision Making in Conservation (and How to Change This) 103
  16. 7. Cautionary Wildlife Tales: Learning to Fail or Failing to Learn? 113
  17. 8. Coyotes, Compassionate Conservation, and Coexistence: Why Ignoring Nature Means Ineff ective “Predator Management” 119
  18. 9. Why Evolutionary Biology Is Important for Conservation: Toward Evolutionarily Sustainable Harvest Management 125
  19. 10. Reintroductions to “Ratchet Up” Public Perceptions of Biodiversity: Reversing the Extinction of Experience through Animal Restorations 137
  20. 11. Przewalski’s Horses and Red Wolves: Importance of Behavioral Research for Species Brought Back from the Brink of Extinction 153
  21. 12. Why Individuals Matter: Lessons in Animal Welfare and Conservation 159
  22. Part Three. Conservation Economics and Politics
  23. It All Comes Down to Money 169
  24. 13. The Imperative of Steady State Economics for Wild Animal Welfare 171
  25. 14. Conservation, Biodiversity, and Tourism in New Zealand : Engaging with the Conservation Economy 183
  26. Part Four. Human Dimensions of Social Justice, Empathy, and Compassion for Animals and Other Nature
  27. 15. Anthropological Perspectives on Ignoring Nature 199
  28. 16. Nature and Animals in Human Social Interactions: Fostering Environmental Identity 211
  29. 17. Conservation Social Work The Interconnectedness of Biodiversity Health and Human Resilience 223
  30. 18. The War on Nature—Turning the Tide?: Lessons from Other Movements and Conservation History 237
  31. 19. Consuming Nature: The Cultural Politics of Animals and the Environment in the Mass Media 257
  32. 20. Children, Animals, and Social Neuroscience: Empathy, Conservation Education, and Activism 271
  33. Part Five. Culture, Religion, and Spirituality
  34. Using Empathy and Compassion to Develop a Unified Global Movement to Protect Animals and Their Homes 289
  35. 21. Compassionate Conservation: A Paradigm Shift for Wildlife Management in Australasia 295
  36. 22. Explaining China’s Wildlife Crisis: Cultural Tradition or Politics of Development 317
  37. 23. A Triangular Playing Field: The Social, Economic, and Ethical Context of Conserving India’s Natural Heritage 331
  38. 24. Conservation and Its Challenges in Kenya 343
  39. 25. Is Green Religion an Oxymoron? : Biocultural Evolution and Earthly Spirituality 353
  40. 26. Avatar: The Search for Biosynergy and Compassion 361
  41. Some Closing Words :Moving Ahead with Heart, Peace, and Compassion 379
  42. About the Contributors 389
  43. Contributors’ Contact Information 399
  44. Index 405
Ignoring Nature No More
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Ignoring Nature No More
Heruntergeladen am 1.5.2026 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.7208/9780226925363-017/html?lang=de
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