University of Waterloo, CT2 7NR, 200 University Ave. W., Waterloo, ON, N2L 3G1, Canada.
Geography and Environmental Management, Faculty of Environment, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Canada.
Ambio. 2022 Jul;51(7):1615-1631. doi: 10.1007/s13280-021-01675-y. Epub 2021 Dec 1.
The global illegal wildlife trade has been anecdotally linked to other serious crimes, such as fraud, corruption, and money laundering, as well as the cross-border trafficking of drugs, arms, counterfeit goods, and persons. As research on this topic is scarce and sporadic, we conducted a scoping literature review to gather information across multiple disciplines and evidence types on crime convergences in the illegal wildlife trade. We reviewed 150 papers published between 2000 and 2020. We found that the illegal trade in many of the most frequently trafficked species have reportedly converged with numerous other serious and organised crimes, most commonly drug trafficking. Convergences can occur in a variety of ways, although the diversification of organised crime groups, parallel trafficking of contraband, and use of enabling crimes (such as corruption and violence) were the most frequently described. Possible explanations for our results and future research directions are discussed.
全球非法野生动物贸易已被传闻与其他严重犯罪有关,如欺诈、腐败和洗钱,以及毒品、武器、假冒商品和人口的跨国贩运。由于对此类犯罪的研究很少且零散,我们进行了范围广泛的文献综述,以收集跨多个学科和证据类型的信息,了解非法野生动物贸易中的犯罪趋同现象。我们审查了 2000 年至 2020 年期间发表的 150 篇论文。我们发现,据报道,许多最常被贩运的物种的非法贸易与许多其他严重和有组织的犯罪行为,最常见的是毒品贩运相融合。趋同可以通过多种方式发生,尽管有组织犯罪集团的多样化、违禁品的平行贩运以及利用促成犯罪(如腐败和暴力)是最常描述的方式。我们讨论了对研究结果的可能解释和未来的研究方向。