Coexistence is the property of things existing at the same time and in a proximity close enough to affect each other, without causing harm to one another. The term is often used with respect to people of different persuasions existing together, particularly where there is some history of antipathy or violence between those groups.
Coexistence can be observed to a property of all systems in which different aspects capable of interacting with each other exist at the same time. As one source asserts, "even at the molecular level, existence is always already coexistence". [1] Nonliving things can also be characterized as coexisting where multiple kinds of such things exist in the same space, with the term having been used for things as disparate as different kinds of dunes on Mars, [2] and black holes existing in the same region of space as dense nuclear star clusters. [3] Other examples of coexistence include:
Coexistence does not require a complete absence of conflict, but may include "the simultaneous presence of banal tensions and conflicts of interest". [4] Thus, a "minimal level of coexistence is compatible with competition and even conflicts, if conducted through legitimate channels". [5]
Cultural Coexistence Theory (CCT), also called Social-ecological Coexistence Theory, expands on coexistence theory to explain how groups of people with shared interests in natural resources (e.g., a fishery) can come to coexist sustainably. [6] Cultural Coexistence Theory draws on work by anthropologists such as Frederik Barth and John Bennett, both of whom studied the interactions among culture groups on shared landscapes. In addition to the core ecological concepts described above, which CCT summarizes as limited similarity, limited competition, and resilience, CCT argues the following features are essential for cultural coexistence:
Cultural Coexistence Theory fits in under the broader area of sustainability science, common pool resources theory, and conflict theory.
Hyperboreae Undae (HU), one of several dune fields surrounding the north polar plateau of Mars, Planum Boreum, has well-known examples of coexisting barchanoid and lineartype dunes and yardang.
Coexistence is the property of things existing at the same time and in a proximity close enough to affect each other, without causing harm to one another. The term is often used with respect to people of different persuasions existing together, particularly where there is some history of antipathy or violence between those groups.
Coexistence can be observed to a property of all systems in which different aspects capable of interacting with each other exist at the same time. As one source asserts, "even at the molecular level, existence is always already coexistence". [1] Nonliving things can also be characterized as coexisting where multiple kinds of such things exist in the same space, with the term having been used for things as disparate as different kinds of dunes on Mars, [2] and black holes existing in the same region of space as dense nuclear star clusters. [3] Other examples of coexistence include:
Coexistence does not require a complete absence of conflict, but may include "the simultaneous presence of banal tensions and conflicts of interest". [4] Thus, a "minimal level of coexistence is compatible with competition and even conflicts, if conducted through legitimate channels". [5]
Cultural Coexistence Theory (CCT), also called Social-ecological Coexistence Theory, expands on coexistence theory to explain how groups of people with shared interests in natural resources (e.g., a fishery) can come to coexist sustainably. [6] Cultural Coexistence Theory draws on work by anthropologists such as Frederik Barth and John Bennett, both of whom studied the interactions among culture groups on shared landscapes. In addition to the core ecological concepts described above, which CCT summarizes as limited similarity, limited competition, and resilience, CCT argues the following features are essential for cultural coexistence:
Cultural Coexistence Theory fits in under the broader area of sustainability science, common pool resources theory, and conflict theory.
Hyperboreae Undae (HU), one of several dune fields surrounding the north polar plateau of Mars, Planum Boreum, has well-known examples of coexisting barchanoid and lineartype dunes and yardang.