Angry Birds… All in a Twitter about Trophy Hunting: Are the Big Five Safe under the Eaves?

Metolo Foyet
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Abstract

Trophy hunting has turned into a contentious global debate opposing urban westerners and rural African communities. The former argue for animal rights. The latter argue for human rights, de-colonialism and legitimacy over their resources, relying on the principle that legal rights should be given back to local people to sustainably use their wildlife. While human geography studies have examined both trophy hunting and social media influences on people and places, conservation as a body of knowledge has not yet caught up with the role of cyber-movements in spreading discourses. This paper presents a case study using netnography, content analysis and the Cycle of Aggression theory to capture the perception of Twitter users towards trophy hunting in Africa. Rural African communities are demanding a new deal in which they are shareholders rather than disempowered stakeholders in their own wildlife resource use and management. Thus, externally imposed bans, including import bans, undermine not only the foundations of sustainable wildlife management but also the rights of local peoples.
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愤怒的小鸟...... 全在一条关于战利品狩猎的 Twitter 中:五大家族在屋檐下安全吗?
战利品狩猎已成为一场有争议的全球性辩论,西方城市居民和非洲农村社区对此针锋相对。前者主张动物权利。后者则主张人权、去殖民主义和资源合法性,其原则是应将合法权利还给当地人,让他们可持续地利用野生动物。虽然人文地理研究已经考察了战利品狩猎和社交媒体对人和地方的影响,但作为知识体系的保护尚未跟上网络运动在传播话语方面的作用。本文介绍了一项案例研究,利用网络志、内容分析和侵略循环理论来捕捉推特用户对非洲战利品狩猎的看法。非洲农村社区正在要求一种新的交易,在这种交易中,他们是股东,而不是在自己的野生动物资源使用和管理中被剥夺权利的利益相关者。因此,外部强加的禁令(包括进口禁令)不仅破坏了可持续野生动物管理的基础,也损害了当地人民的权利。
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