The Elephant Vanishes: impact of human-elephant conflict on people's wellbeing

Health Place. 2012 Nov;18(6):1356-65. doi: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2012.06.019. Epub 2012 Jul 8.

Abstract

Human-wildlife conflicts impact upon the wellbeing of marginalised people, worldwide. Although tangible losses from such conflicts are well documented, hidden health consequences remain under-researched. Based on preliminary clinical ethnographic inquiries and sustained fieldwork in Assam, India, this paper documents mental health antecedents and consequences including severe untreated psychiatric morbidity and substance abuse. The case studies presented make visible the hidden mental health dimensions of human-elephant conflict. The paper illustrates how health impacts of conflicts penetrate far deeper than immediate physical threat from elephants, worsens pre-existing mental illness of marginalised people, and leads to newer psychiatric and social pathologies. These conflicts are enacted and perpetuated in institutional spaces of inequality. The authors argue that both wildlife conservation and community mental health disciplines would be enhanced by coordinated intervention. The paper concludes by generating questions that are fundamental for a new interdisciplinary paradigm that bridges ecology and the clinic.

Publication types

  • Case Reports
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Animals
  • Animals, Wild*
  • Anthropology, Cultural
  • Conflict, Psychological
  • Conservation of Natural Resources
  • Elephants*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • India / epidemiology
  • Male
  • Mental Disorders / epidemiology
  • Mental Disorders / etiology*
  • Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic / epidemiology
  • Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic / etiology
  • Substance-Related Disorders / epidemiology
  • Substance-Related Disorders / etiology