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Study on the interaction between security and wildlife conservation in Sub-Saharan Africa . Part I
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Study on the interaction between security and wildlife conservation in Sub-Saharan Africa . Part I
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Since the early 2000s the world has seen an alarming surge in poaching and trafficking of protected flora and fauna species. These crimes impact not just biodiversity; they also undermine the rule of law, affect economies through loss of revenues, endanger the physical and food security of local communities as well as state and regional security due to the involvement of armed groups, and in some
cases drive people to migrate. These impacts are particularly felt in biodiversity-rich countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, which are greatly affected by poaching and trafficking, and serve as source and transit points for massive quantities of illegal wildlife, fish and timber. In many Sub-Saharan Africa countries competition and conflicts over land use and natural resources (including wildlife), exacerbated by weak governance, organised crime and climate change, are played out in and near biodiversity-rich protected areas and other natural resource-rich areas. There is no doubt, therefore, that wildlife and security in Sub-Saharan Africa are closely linked. To what extent, and how exactly, is not very well known however, nor which responses can help to address this wildlife-security nexus. The Directorate-General for International Cooperation and Development of the European Commission (DG DEVCO Unit C2) commissioned a study (SC No 2017/384894; LOT 6: Environment EuropeAid/127054/C/SER/multi) with the objective of providing the Commission with evidence and robust information/understanding on the wildlife-security nexus in Sub- Saharan Africa, in order for the Commission to engage in a well-informed political dialogue on the wildlife-security nexus, define an effective response and design programmes that mutually reinforce wildlife and security.
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Publication details
Related publications
Published:
2020-02-07
Corporate author(s):
Directorate-General for International Cooperation and Development
(
European Commission
)
Now known as...
Now known as...
Directorate-General for International Partnerships
(
European Commission
)
Themes:
Africa, Caribbean and Pacific
,
Conservation of resources
Subject:
biodiversity
,
conservation of resources
,
corruption
,
development policy
,
economic consequence
,
ecosystem
,
illicit trade
,
international cooperation
,
organised crime
,
protection of animal life
,
protection of plant life
,
regional security
,
rule of law
,
sub-Saharan Africa
,
the EU's international role
,
wildlife
PDF
ISSN
ISBN
978-92-76-09180-6
DOI
10.2841/33877
Catalogue number
MN-02-19-602-EN-N
PDF
ISBN
978-92-76-09180-6
DOI
10.2841/33877
Catalogue number
MN-02-19-602-EN-N
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