University of Leicester
Browse

Emerging illegal wildlife trade issues: A global horizon scan

Download (1010.59 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2020-06-08, 13:35 authored by Nafeesa Esmail, Bonnie C Wintle, Michael t Sas-Rolfes, Andrea Athanas, Colin M Beale, Zara Bending, Ran Dai, Michael Fabinyi, Sarah Gluszek, Cathy Haenlein, Lauren A Harrington, Amy Hinsley, Kennedy Kariuki, Jack Lam, Matthew Markus, Kumar Paudel, Sofiya Shukhova, William J Sutherland, Diogo Verissimo, Yifu Wang, John Waugh, Jon H Wetton, Catherine Workman, Joss Wright, Eleanor J Milner-Gulland
Illegal wildlife trade is gaining prominence as a threat to biodiversity, but addressing it remains challenging. To help inform proactive policy responses in the face of uncertainty, in 2018 we conducted a horizon scan of significant emerging issues. We built upon existing iterative horizon scanning methods, using an open and global participatory approach to evaluate and rank issues from a diverse range of sources. Prioritized issues related to three themes: developments in biological, information, and financial technologies; changing trends in demand and information; and socioeconomic, geopolitical shifts and influences. The issues covered areas ranging from changing demographic and economic factors to innovations in technology and communications that affect illegal wildlife trade markets globally; the top three issues related to China, illustrating its vital role in tackling emerging threats. This analysis can support national governments, international bodies, researchers, and nongovernmental organizations as they develop strategies for addressing the illegal wildlife trade.

Funding

Oxford Martin School, University of Oxford,Grant/Award Number: R56377/RE001

History

Citation

Conservation Letters.2020;e12715

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Conservation Letters

Pagination

e12715 (10)

Publisher

Wiley

issn

1755-263X

eissn

1755-263X

Acceptance date

2020-02-29

Copyright date

2020

Language

English

Publisher version

https://conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/conl.12715