
Conservation science has traditionally centered on the notion of human-wildlife conflict, framing animals and humans as adversaries vying for space and resources. However, as Jolly and Stronza (2025) argue, this focus has obscured a more common reality: coexistence. For generations, Indigenous and traditional communities around the world have demonstrated that living alongside wildlife is not an extraordinary achievement but a lived and dynamic norm. The authors advocate for a fundamental shift in perspective—from viewing coexistence as an ideal to recognizing it as an ongoing reality in many parts of the world.
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