scholarly journals NGO-state relations in the monitoring of illegal forest logging and wildlife trafficking in Central Africa

2021 ◽  
Vol 148 ◽  
pp. 105670
Author(s):  
Aurelian Mbzibain ◽  
Teodyl Nkuintchua Tchoudjen
Forests ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 6 (12) ◽  
pp. 380-394 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adeline Fayolle ◽  
Dakis-Yaoba Ouédraogo ◽  
Gauthier Ligot ◽  
Kasso Daïnou ◽  
Nils Bourland ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 183 ◽  
pp. 01003
Author(s):  
SidiImad Cherkaoui ◽  
Mohamed Boukherouk ◽  
Tarik Lakhal ◽  
Adil Aghzar ◽  
Lahcen El Youssfi

COVID-19 pandemic has had huge impacts on multiple industries and sectors, not just ecotourism and wildlife protection in Morocco. Ecological health and wildlife are a critical resource for the country’s tourism sector recovery. Conservation is considered as one of the industries that are hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic. Many of the threats facing biodiversity and protected areas have been exacerbated during and following, the outbreak with practices such as poaching, wildlife trafficking, and forest logging activities resumed due to the country lockdown and ecotourism collapse. Conservationists should take emergency actions in the short-term to help rural communities and grassroots organizations and review waysto achieve conservation and sustainability goals in the post-pandemic era.


2015 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 345-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
ROSALEEN DUFFY ◽  
FREYA A. V. ST JOHN ◽  
BRAM BÜSCHER ◽  
DAN BROCKINGTON

SummaryConservation is at a critical juncture because of the increase in poaching which threatens key species. Poaching is a major public concern, as indicated by the rises in rhino and elephant poaching, the United for Wildlife Initiative and the London Declaration, signed by 46 countries in February 2014. This is accompanied by an increasing calls for a more forceful response, especially to tackle the involvement of organized crime in wildlife trafficking. However, there is a risk that this will be counter-productive. Further, such calls are based on a series of assumptions which are worthy of greater scrutiny. First, calls for militarization are based on the idea that poverty drives poaching. Yet, poaching and trafficking are changing because of the shifting dynamics of poverty in supply countries, coupled with changing patterns of wealth in consumer markets. Second, the ways increases in poaching are being linked to global security threats, notably from Al Shabaab are poorly evidenced and yet circulate in powerful policy circles. There is a risk that militarization will place more heavily armed rangers in the centre of some of the most complex regional conflicts in the world (such as the Horn of Africa and Central Africa/Sahel region).


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sébastien Owona ◽  
Lothar Ratschbacher ◽  
Gulzar Afzal M ◽  
Moussa Nsangou Ngapna ◽  
Joseph Mvondo Ondoa ◽  
...  

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