4.6 Review

Importance of deepening integration of crime and conservation sciences

Journal

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13710

Keywords

common pool resources; community‐ based management; crime science; environmental criminology; fisheries; governance; Mexico; sea cucumber; ciencia criminoló gica; criminologí a ambiental; gobernanza; manejo basado en la comunidad; Mé xico; pepino de mar; pesquerí as

Funding

  1. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Division of International Conservation, International Affairs, Caribbean Program [F20AP00147]
  2. Michigan State University Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies

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Conservation crime science is a new interdisciplinary field that can help address the globally distributed societal problem of conservation crime. The article reviews the breadth of crime science approaches being used in conservation, using sea cucumber trafficking in Mexico as a case study to emphasize the importance of interdisciplinary approaches. The authors identify challenges in applying crime science methods to conservation contexts and suggest that nurturing interdisciplinary crime and conservation science can enhance innovation and accelerate successful risk management programs and policy agendas.
Conservation crime is a globally distributed societal problem. Conservation crime science, an emerging interdisciplinary field, has the potential to help address this problem. However, its utility depends on serious reflection on the transposition of crime science approaches to conservation contexts, which may differ in meaningful ways from traditional crime contexts. We considered the breadth of crime science approaches being used in conservation as well as the depth of crime science integration in conservation. We used the case of sea cucumber (Holothuria floridana, Isostichopus badionotus) trafficking in Mexico as an example of why the interdisciplinarity of crime and conservation sciences should be deepened and how integration can help ideate new solutions. We first conducted a review of literature to capture the range of interdisciplinarity applications. We identified 6 crime science approaches being applied to the conservation contexts of illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing; wildlife and plant crime; and illegal logging. We then compared this knowledge base to the case of illegal sea cucumber fishing in Mexico. We identified 5 challenges in the application of these approaches to conservation contexts: the relative diffusion of harms and victims in conservation crimes; scalar mismatches in crime, authority, and the conservation issue itself; interactions between legal and illegal networks; communities and their authority to define and control crime; and the role of natural science in the rule of law. Considering these 5 factors may enhance the depth of interdisciplinarity between crime and conservation sciences. Nurturing interdisciplinary crime and conservation science will expand innovation and help accelerate successful risk management programs and other policy agendas.

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