'… an ideal reference for environmental lawyers, conservation researchers ... (especially students), practitioners, and policy makers looking to delve deeper into the nuances of environmental jurisprudence vis-à-vis human-wildlife conflict. … It is an important and valuable addition to the vast literature on the subject and is novel insofar as it attempts to understand human-nature relationships in their entirety and the interactions between the psycho-social, cultural, economic, and political factors, aside from the ecological ones.' Saloni Bhatia, Conservation and Society
1. The Broken Human-Wildlife Relationship; 2. The Human-Wildlife Relationship: An Ecofeminist Approach to Vulnerability Theory; 3. Friends in the Wild? The Problem of Human-Wildlife Conflict and its Governance; 4. Friends in Law?: the Critical Complexities of International Wildlife Law; 5. Human-Dingo Conflict on K'Gari-Fraser Island; 6. Human-Elephant Conflict in Northern Botswana; 7. Pandemic Vulnerability and Resilience; Wildlife and COVID-19; 8. Conclusion.