The Role of Religion and Spirituality in Snow Leopard Conservation on and Around the Tibetan Plateau
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Date
2018
Authors
Taub, Hannah
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Oregon
Abstract
As an endangered species, snow leopards are in critical and immediate danger of
extinction. In the last few decades, concerted efforts on the part of conservation
organizations and various governments have created stricter legal protections and
designated hundreds of kilometers of land as snow leopard habitat reserves. However,
given the sparsely populated, remote and rugged landscape that snow leopards roam,
difficulties arise when monitoring the species and patrolling the protected areas.
Tibetan Buddhists and indigenous communities inhabit land that often overlaps with
snow leopard range and their spiritual traditions and practices embody an
environmental ethic that puts particular emphasis on respect for animal life,
specifically including snow leopards. Geographical proximity and spiritual values that
align closely with conservation principles support the argument that indigenous and
Tibetan Buddhist communities are valuable, underutilized resources in the efforts to
protect snow leopards in and around the Tibetan Plateau. Incorporating the traditional,
local knowledge of and reverence for snow leopards with scientific approaches would
create a more successful and culturally-sensitive method of conservation.
Description
10 pages
Keywords
Endangered species, Snow leopard, Tibetan Buddhists, Environmental ethics, Wildlife conservation, Spirituality
Citation
Taub, H. (2018). The Role of Religion and Spirituality in Snow Leopard Conservation on and Around the Tibetan Plateau. Oregon Undergraduate Research Journal, 12(1). doi:10.5399/uo/ourj.12.1.3