“You walk on glass if you are in that space”: Risks and harms of corruption in wildlife justice pathways in Uganda

Anne-Marie Weeden , Nicholas Pamment
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Abstract

Wildlife crime drives existential harms including biodiversity loss and climate change, disproportionately affecting the Global South. Criminal justice approaches dominate the public response, yet scant evidence exists on how corruption, an economic crime, undermines deterrence and exacerbates inequalities. This primary research study utilises a qualitative approach to examine the risks and harms of corruption within wildlife enforcement and justice in Uganda. Using a red-green criminological perspective and drawing upon semi-structured interviews with experts and practitioners from government and civil society, this paper identifies corruption risks in wildlife criminal justice and explores their related harms and consequences. The study finds wildlife enforcement in Uganda suffers from institutional corruption, including perverse incentives which distort targeting and resource prioritisation, leading to discrimination against low-level offenders. Furthermore, differential access to individualist corruption opportunities along the justice pathway enables wealthy or well-connected suspects to avoid sanctions, resulting in sentencing inequities. Despite resulting in differential outcomes for affluent and subsistence offenders, the study concludes that corruption in wildlife justice neutralises deterrence for both offender types. By creating impunity for elites, organised crime actors are attracted to the trade. Moreover, by amplifying sentencing inequalities, subsistence offenders are further impoverished, increasing re-offending. Corruption in wildlife justice thus drives significant long-term environmental, socioeconomic, and political harms, and erodes the rule of law.
"如果你在那个空间,你就走在玻璃上":乌干达野生动物司法途径中腐败的风险和危害
野生动物犯罪造成生物多样性丧失和气候变化等生存危害,对全球南部地区的影响尤为严重。刑事司法方法在公共应对措施中占主导地位,但关于腐败这种经济犯罪如何削弱威慑力并加剧不平等的证据却很少。这项初级研究采用定性方法,考察乌干达野生动物执法和司法领域腐败的风险和危害。本文采用红绿犯罪学视角,通过对来自政府和民间社会的专家和从业人员进行半结构式访谈,确定了野生动物刑事司法中的腐败风险,并探讨了其相关危害和后果。研究发现,乌干达的野生动物执法工作存在制度性腐败问题,包括扭曲目标和资源优先次序的不正当激励措施,导致对低级别罪犯的歧视。此外,在司法途径中,个人主义腐败机会的不同使得富裕或关系良好的嫌疑人能够逃避制裁,从而导致量刑不公。尽管富裕犯罪者和自给自足犯罪者的结果不同,但研究得出的结论是,野生动物司法中的腐败会削弱对这两种犯罪者的威慑力。通过让精英逍遥法外,有组织犯罪分子被吸引到野生动物贸易中来。此外,通过扩大量刑不平等,自给自足的罪犯进一步陷入贫困,从而增加了再犯罪率。因此,野生动物司法领域的腐败会对环境、社会经济和政治造成长期严重危害,并削弱法治。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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