[HTML][HTML] “I am Wolf, I Rule!”-Attributing Intentions to Animals in Human-Wildlife Interactions

UM Jürgens - Frontiers in Conservation Science, 2022 - frontiersin.org
Human interactions with potentially problematic wildlife spawn intense and polarized
sentiments. This study investigates one contributing factor: People perceive wildlife as …

[HTML][HTML] Wolves, crows, and spiders: An eclectic literature review inspires a model explaining humans' similar reactions to ecologically different wildlife

UM Jürgens, PMW Hackett - Frontiers in Environmental Science, 2021 - frontiersin.org
Coming from the vantage point of managing human relations to potentially problematic
wildlife, we bring the following questions: Where do people's emotionally vigorous and …

Approaching human-animal relationships from multiple angles: A synthetic perspective

A Echeverri, DS Karp, R Naidoo, J Zhao… - Biological Conservation, 2018 - Elsevier
Non-human animals are ubiquitous in human lives: we dress with their fur and their skin, we
eat their meat, and we visit them in zoos and aquaria (DeMello, 2012). Some of us construct …

[HTML][HTML] Managing Wolves is Managing Narratives: Views of Wolves and Nature Shape People's Proposals for Navigating Human-Wolf Relations

UM Jürgens, M Grinko, A Szameitat, L Hieber… - Human Ecology, 2023 - Springer
The resurgence of wolf populations in Germany is causing controversies regarding their
management policies. Through 41 semi-structured interviews with stakeholders, we found …

[HTML][HTML] Wolves, Crows, Spiders, and People: A Qualitative Study Yielding a Three-Layer Framework for Understanding Human–Wildlife Relations

UM Jürgens, PMW Hackett, M Hunziker, A Patt - Diversity, 2022 - mdpi.com
Human dimensions research has proposed a multitude of variables impacting the viability of
wildlife populations. Extant approaches to systematizing these variables have mostly …

Beyond conflict: exploring the spectrum of human–wildlife interactions and their underlying mechanisms

S Bhatia, SM Redpath, K Suryawanshi, C Mishra - Oryx, 2020 - cambridge.org
Humans have lived alongside and interacted with wild animals throughout evolutionary
history. Even though wild animals can damage property, or injure humans and domesticated …

Understanding the acceptability of wolf management actions: roles of cognition and emotion

TM Straka, KK Miller, MH Jacobs - Human Dimensions of Wildlife, 2020 - Taylor & Francis
Wolf management actions are seldom universally accepted and understanding diverse
opinions is of value for conservation practitioners. Previous research has either investigated …

Moral dimensions of human–wildlife conflict

ML Lute, CD Navarrete, MP Nelson… - Conservation …, 2016 - Wiley Online Library
Despite increasing support for conservation globally, controversy over specific conservation
policies persists among diverse stakeholders. Investigating the links between morals in …

Emotional states elicited by wolf videos are diverse and explain general attitudes towards wolves

U Arbieu, L Taysse, O Gimenez, L Lehnen… - People and …, 2024 - Wiley Online Library
Emotions are short, intuitive mental processes that are important components of people's
cognitions. They can influence attitudes (ie positive or negative evaluations of objects), and …

Human attitudes towards wolves, a matter of distance

J Karlsson, M Sjöström - Biological conservation, 2007 - Elsevier
The objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that distance is an important factor
affecting attitudes towards wolves, ie people living far from wolf territories have more positive …