This report provides data on the logistics, scope and economics of the illegal trade in wildlife in Vietnam. It analyses the main reasons for the rapid growth in this trade and highlights key failures in the country’s attempts to control it. The report recommends that the government should strengthen the capacity of the agencies responsible for fighting the trade and raise their budgets. It also highlights the need to use education to encourage Vietnamese people to stop consuming illegal wildlife products. The report concludes that, given the scale of the problem, a high level of commitment at all levels of government will be needed to significantly affect the illegal wildlife trade in Vietnam
Illicit trade generates billions of dollars annually for transnational criminal networks. Southeast ...
Wildlife trade is the very heart of biodiversity conservation and sustainable development providing ...
10.1142/9789813230620_0002Sustainability Matters625-57SingaporeSustainability Matters, published by ...
A summary of EEPSEA Research Report 2003-RR6, "Wildlife Trading in Vietnam: Why it Flourishes", by N...
The results of this study provide data on the logistics, scope, routes, channels, seasons, and the e...
Illegal wildlife trade threatens the biodiversity of many nations in the world, including Vietnam. T...
Illegal wildlife trade is a pervasive and destructive crime that is contributing to biodiversity los...
Viet Nam harbors a high level of biological diversity in the world. However, Viet Nam is also known ...
Vietnam is an established thoroughfare for illegal wildlife trade, and rapidly growing urban prosper...
Many species in Southeast Asia have been over-hunted to supply the demand for Traditional Asian Medi...
The illegal wildlife trade is the most significant direct threat to biodiversity in Indochina. This ...
Illegal and unsustainable wildlife trade is a growing threat to the survival of thousands of species...
This article focuses on an often-neglected dimensions of Vietnam’s economic development : the deep c...
The wildlife trade is a major cause of species loss and can trigger disease transmission. While the ...
In Indonesia, the value of the illegal trade in wildlife reaches more than US one million per year. ...
Illicit trade generates billions of dollars annually for transnational criminal networks. Southeast ...
Wildlife trade is the very heart of biodiversity conservation and sustainable development providing ...
10.1142/9789813230620_0002Sustainability Matters625-57SingaporeSustainability Matters, published by ...
A summary of EEPSEA Research Report 2003-RR6, "Wildlife Trading in Vietnam: Why it Flourishes", by N...
The results of this study provide data on the logistics, scope, routes, channels, seasons, and the e...
Illegal wildlife trade threatens the biodiversity of many nations in the world, including Vietnam. T...
Illegal wildlife trade is a pervasive and destructive crime that is contributing to biodiversity los...
Viet Nam harbors a high level of biological diversity in the world. However, Viet Nam is also known ...
Vietnam is an established thoroughfare for illegal wildlife trade, and rapidly growing urban prosper...
Many species in Southeast Asia have been over-hunted to supply the demand for Traditional Asian Medi...
The illegal wildlife trade is the most significant direct threat to biodiversity in Indochina. This ...
Illegal and unsustainable wildlife trade is a growing threat to the survival of thousands of species...
This article focuses on an often-neglected dimensions of Vietnam’s economic development : the deep c...
The wildlife trade is a major cause of species loss and can trigger disease transmission. While the ...
In Indonesia, the value of the illegal trade in wildlife reaches more than US one million per year. ...
Illicit trade generates billions of dollars annually for transnational criminal networks. Southeast ...
Wildlife trade is the very heart of biodiversity conservation and sustainable development providing ...
10.1142/9789813230620_0002Sustainability Matters625-57SingaporeSustainability Matters, published by ...