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The Atlas of Conflict Reduction

A Montana Field-Guide To Sharing Ranching Landscapes With Wildlife

Hannah Jaicks author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Anthem Press

Published:13th Sep '22

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

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The Atlas of Conflict Reduction cover

Taking readers on a journey through western Montana, showcases pioneering strategies for reducing conflicts with wildlife and provides a roadmap on how healthy, shared ranching landscapes can be achieved.

This book takes readers on a journey through western Montana to showcase ranchers and partner groups who are pioneering strategies for reducing conflicts with wildlife and why. Conservation heroes, using psychological theory interwoven with personal stories from the twenty-first century, provide a roadmap on how healthy, shared ranching landscapes can be achieved.

The book is a firsthand account of Dr. Hannah Jaicks’ journey through western Montana's ranching landscapes to showcase the stories of ranchers and affiliated groups who are pioneering strategies for reducing conflicts with wildlife, while also stewarding the landscape. Often seen as antithetical to one another, American ranchers and wildlife have long been entangled with another. This book is about producers who are forging new paths in conservation and addressing these seemingly intractable entanglements to sustain working ranch operations alongside healthy wildlife populations. It elevates the voices of these people striving daily to achieve wild and working landscapes in the West and serves as a model for how others can begin to do the same. Dr. Jaicks takes readers on a journey up western Montana to a different valley in each chapter and showcases the place-based stories of everyday conservation heroes who provide consciously raised agricultural products and protect vital habitat for endemic wildlife that would otherwise be developed and subdivided beyond repair. This book will inform readers about progressive ways to make the world we share – with people and animals – a better place to live.

“Dr. Jaicks is at her strongest when weaving dialogue from her extensive collection of interviews in Montana’s ranching community together with surveys of ecology, food systems and climate change literatures. Her approach offers a compelling glimpse into the lives, concerns and values of ranchers—a population that many, especially outside of the Rocky Mountain West—may have very limited access to. And just as importantly, her analysis gives readers a clear picture of how those lives, concerns and values can help chart a path toward human-wildlife coexistence.”—Joshua Morse, Gund Graduate Fellow, Rubenstein School for Environment and Natural Resources, University of Vermont, USA.

ISBN: 9781839987113

Dimensions: 229mm x 153mm x 26mm

Weight: 454g

248 pages