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Member
Overview |
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To ensure
that trade
in wild
plants and
animals is
not a threat
to the
conservation
of nature. |
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-
Monitors
wildlife
trade at
international,
regional
and
national
levels -
researching
both
domestic
and
international
chains
of
supply
and
demand
to
identify
interventions
to
increase
the
efficiency
of
management.
-
Works
closely
with
governments,
providing
critical
information
on the
impacts
of
trade,
motivating
efforts
to
increase
the
ecological
sustainability
of trade
in wild
species
and
helping
to
improve
enforcement
of
international
wildlife
trade
control.
-
Enhanced
CITES
(Convention
on
International
Trade in
Endangered
Species
of Wild
Fauna
and
Flora)
implementation
- More
scientific
foundations
for
CITES
management
decision
making,
including
the
establishment
of
robust
legislative
systems,
regulatory
guidelines
and
management
frameworks
for
legal
wildlife
trade
(e.g.
setting
and
monitoring
of
quotas
for
harvest
and
trade).
-
Inter-agency
co-operation
- Both
in-country
and
between
countries,
to
implement
and
enforce
regulatory
systems
and
legislation.
-
Working
with the
private
sector
and
civil
society
- The
active
engagement
of trade
and
consumer
associations,
the
transport
industry
and
general
civil
society
will
help
raise
awareness
of laws
and
upstream
conservation
effect
market
divers.
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Wildlife
trade and
CITES
capacity
building. |
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TRAFFIC -
the wildlife
trade
monitoring
network
Unit 9-3A,
3rd Floor,
Jalan
SS23/11,
Taman Sea,
47400
Petaling
Jaya,
Selangor.
Tel:
(603) 7880
3940
Fax:
(603)
7882 0171
Email:
naatsea@po.jaring.my
Web:
www.traffic.org |
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