Mar. 20, 2013 — Relationships between humans
and wolves are often linked to conflicts with livestock breeding activities.
Contrary to a widespread belief among western environmentalists, these
conflicts don't only occur only in western countries, even though their
intensity often appears lower in other places. Indeed, in many countries,
livestock breeding activities have been dealing with wolves for centuries and
rural societies have developed paths to coexistence through protection of
livestock and control of wolf populations.
However, the world is changing, and rural societies
are facing changes that can affect the way they relate to large carnivores like
wolves. It is particularly obvious in countries which went through dramatic and
rapid transition processes after the fall of USSR
and Yugoslavia .
Researchers from the Norwegian Institute for Nature
Research conducted ethnological investigations based on participant observation
and semi-structured interviews on human-wolf relationships in Kyrgyzstan (2003-2007) and Republic of Macedonia
(2007-2008) which both have been subjected to rapid social changes.
The investigations highlighted that the institutional
and economic crisis following the collapse of the USSR
and Yugoslavia
had a strong impact on livestock breeding and hunting activities which were
highly dependent on State support. Wolf hunting was also affected in Kyrgyzstan as economic and logistical means
supporting intensive wolf hunting were no longer available after the collapse
of the USSR .
The studies revealed that these changes in hunting
and husbandry practices have led to modifications of the human -- wolf
interactions as well as of the social and environmental contexts of human-wolf
relationships.
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