The Governance of the Wolf-Human Relationship in Europe
Journal article, 2013

We analyze the architecture and functioning of wolf governance in the European Union revealing some of the dynamics between biology conservation and social management. Comparing Germany, Galicia (Spain), Portugal and Sweden as illustrative examples the paper highlights important similarities and differences in the governance conceptualizations and architectures. In the second part, the article examines struggles and challenges to the EU’s protective governance paradigm. Our findings indicate that active opposition to wolves becomes especially visible in Sweden and Germany, the two countries with the least number of wolves but their fairly recent re-appearance. We conclude that such opposition cannot be sufficiently explained by rationally grounded disadvantages due, for example, loss of farm animals caused by the large carnivores and/or insufficient compensation measures. We argue it’s more accurate to assume a clash of paradigms, which have in themselves vaster ontological, epistemological, experiential and axiological issues and which, in turn, strongly shape opinions, values and attitudes.

Sweden

Germany

Spain

Portugal

European Union

wolf-human relationship

Galicia

biodiversity management

governance architecture

wolf governance

Author

Christian Stöhr

Chalmers, Applied Information Technology (Chalmers), Engineering Education Research - EER (Chalmers)

Elsa Coimbra

Instituto Universitário de Lisboa (ISCTE-IUL)

Review of European Studies

1918-7173 (ISSN) 1918-7181 (eISSN)

Vol. 5 4 1-18

Areas of Advance

Information and Communication Technology

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories

Sociology

Political Science

Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified

DOI

10.5539/res.v5n4p1

More information

Created

10/8/2017