首页|Dismantling the poachernomics of the illegal wildlife trade

Dismantling the poachernomics of the illegal wildlife trade

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? 2021 The AuthorsPersistent poaching fuelled by demand for elephant ivory and rhino horn continues to threaten these species. Despite international trade restrictions operating since the 1970s, limiting poaching has remained a substantial challenge over the last decade. The poaching economy of such storable goods is driven by a combination of persistent consumer demand and market speculation, and enabled by weak governance, lack of adequate resources for species protection, and alienation of local people who pay the costs of living alongside these species. We argue that restricting the legal supply of such wildlife products has created ideal conditions for the poaching economy — ‘poachernomics’ — to thrive. Strategies that move toward empowering local communities with stronger property rights over wildlife and delivering more benefits to them, including via carefully regulated legal trade, are underused elements in the current fight against the onslaught of the international illegal wildlife trade.

EconomicsElephant ivoryEnforcementExtinctionIllegal tradeIncentivesMarketsOrganized crimePoachingPovertyRhino horn

Di Minin E.、Selier J.、't Sas-Rolfes M.、Louis M.、Bradshaw C.J.A.

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Helsinki Lab of Interdisciplinary Conservation Science Department of Geosciences and Geography University of Helsinki

School of Life Sciences University of KwaZulu-Natal

School of Geography and the Environment University of Oxford

Namibian Association of CBNRM Support Organizations

Global Ecology (Partuyarta Ngadluku Wardli Kuu) College of Science and Engineering Flinders University

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2022

Biological Conservation

Biological Conservation

SCI
ISSN:0006-3207
年,卷(期):2022.265
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