This book assesses the Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), examining both implementation
and compliance. Humans are causing a biodiversity crisis, where 1
million species are facing extinction. Species are dying, in no small
part, because they are overexploited, poached and trafficked and CITES
is the main international instrument designed to protect traded
wildlife. Does the state of the world’s species mean CITES is
failing? This book explores the implementation of and compliance with
CITES by all 183 member countries. It is imperative we know the nature
and extent of the implementation of and compliance with CITES
legislation in all parties to fully understand the impact of legal and
illegal trade on species survival. Through extensive legislative
content analysis, a Delphi iterative survey, and semi-structured
interviews, this is the first book to share empirical research about
CITES implementation and compliance. This book contains a
comprehensive analysis of the state of CITES, what is done well, what
could be done better, and what the future might bring to try to
curtail the slide of the world’s wildlife into extinction. By
identifying lessons learned in relation to CITES legislation,
implementation and compliance this book provides hard evidence to
member countries as to how their own practice can be improved. This
timely book will be essential reading for students and academics
interested in wildlife law, trade and trafficking, green criminology
and biodiversity conservation more broadly. It will also be of
interest to professionals working in wildlife law enforcement.
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Assessing Implementation and Compliance
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781000399998
Publisert
2021
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter