4.1 Article

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

期刊

NATURE CONSERVATION-BULGARIA
卷 -, 期 48, 页码 123-147

出版社

PENSOFT PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.3897/natureconservation.48.81635

关键词

conservation crime; defaunation; deterrence; local communities; situational crime prevention; snare hunting

资金

  1. Ministry of Education and Training Grant [B2018-TDV-11]
  2. Global Wildlife Conservation -Michigan State University [GWC 5118-0115]
  3. National Science Foundation [CMMI-1935451, IIS-2039951]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

By analyzing interview data with community members in protected areas in Vietnam, this paper explores the conditions for informal guardianship, how community members can become more effective informal guardians, and how formal and informal guardianship mechanisms can be linked to maximize deterrence and minimize illegal snaring.
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.

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