Potential for informal guardianship in community-based wildlife crime prevention: Insights from Vietnam

IF 1.2 Q3 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Julie Viollaz, J. Rizzolo, B. Long, C. T. Trung, Josh Kempinski, B. Rawson, D. Reynald, H. X. Quang, Nguyen Ngoc Hien, Cao Tiến Dũng, Hoàng Thương Huyền, Nguyen Thi Thuy Dung, Meredith L. Gore
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

The notion that indigenous people and local communities can effectively prevent conservation crime rests upon the assumption that they are informal guardians of natural resources. Although informal guardianship is a concept typically applied to “traditional” crimes, urban contexts, and the global North, it has great potential to be combined with formal guardianship (such as ranger patrols) to better protect wildlife, incentivize community participation in conservation, and address the limitations of formal enforcement in the global South. Proactive crime prevention is especially important for illegal snare hunting, a practice that has led to pernicious defaunation and which has proved difficult to control due to its broad scope. This paper uses interview data with community members in protected areas in Viet Nam where illegal snare hunting is commonplace to 1) analyze the conditions for informal guardianship in the study locations; 2) explore how community members can become more effective informal guardians; and 3) examine how formal and informal guardianship mechanisms can be linked to maximize deterrence and limit displacement of illegal snaring. Results indicate that conditions for informal guardianship exist but that respondent willingness to intervene depends upon the location, offender activity, and type of offender (outsider versus community member). While respondents generated numerous strategies for wildlife crime prevention, they also listed crime displacement mechanism offenders used to avoid detection. We discuss how informal guardianship can be integrated with formal guardianship into an overall model of situational crime prevention to protect wildlife and incentivize community-led deterrence of illegal snaring.
以社区为基础的野生动物犯罪预防中的非正式监护:来自越南的见解
土著人民和当地社区能够有效防止保护犯罪的观念是建立在他们是自然资源非正式守护者的假设之上的。尽管非正式监护是一个通常适用于“传统”犯罪、城市环境和全球北方的概念,但它与正式监护(如护林员巡逻)相结合具有很大的潜力,可以更好地保护野生动物,激励社区参与保护,并解决全球南方正式执法的局限性。主动预防犯罪对非法陷阱狩猎尤其重要,这种做法导致了有害的诽谤,并且由于其范围广泛而难以控制。本文使用对越南保护区社区成员的访谈数据,非法陷阱狩猎司空见惯,1)分析研究地点的非正式监护条件;2)探索社区成员如何成为更有效的非正式监护人;3)研究如何将正式和非正式监护机制联系起来,以最大限度地威慑和限制非法诱捕的迁移。结果表明,存在非正式监护的条件,但被调查者的干预意愿取决于地点、罪犯活动和罪犯类型(局外人与社区成员)。虽然受访者提出了许多预防野生动物犯罪的策略,但他们也列出了罪犯用来逃避侦查的犯罪转移机制。我们讨论了如何将非正式监护与正式监护整合到情境犯罪预防的整体模型中,以保护野生动物并激励社区主导的非法诱捕威慑。
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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来源期刊
Nature Conservation Research
Nature Conservation Research BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
5.90%
发文量
34
审稿时长
13 weeks
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