Environmental justice and the post-COVID-19 regulation of wildlife trade and markets

IF 3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Journal of Human Rights and the Environment Pub Date : 2022-10-01 DOI:10.4337/jhre.2022.02.03
C. Brockett, K. Woolaston
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Abstract

This article argues that an environmental justice framework should be used to inform the post-COVID-19 regulation of wildlife trade to ensure that justice is afforded to communities and nations reliant on this trade. This argument is offered in response to the pattern of interventionism and dominance in the international regulation of wildlife trade. We respond both to a historical pattern of denied justice, and to a recent increase in calls for the closure of live animal markets, which has the future potential to deny justice. We utilize a multifaceted and pluralist environmental justice theory to highlight where injustice has occurred in the regulation of wildlife trade. Each element of this theory is applied in three case studies (bird species trade, ivory trade and pangolin trade) to highlight how injustice has occurred, linking each to the COVID-19 context. Finally, to disrupt this pattern of dominance, we implore researchers, governments and policymakers to alter their discourse and to move political action from interventionism to a support-based, collaborative role, to ensure that environmental justice is afforded to the communities and states reliant on wildlife trade. © 2022 The Authors.
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环境正义与新冠肺炎疫情后对野生动物贸易和市场的监管
本文认为,应使用环境正义框架为新冠肺炎疫情后野生动物贸易监管提供信息,以确保为依赖野生动物贸易的社区和国家提供正义。这一论点是针对野生动物贸易国际监管中的干预主义和主导模式提出的。我们既回应了被剥夺正义的历史模式,也回应了最近要求关闭活体动物市场的呼声增加,这在未来有可能剥夺正义。我们利用多方面和多元化的环境正义理论来强调野生动物贸易监管中的不公正现象。这一理论的每一个元素都应用于三个案例研究(鸟类贸易、象牙贸易和穿山甲贸易),以强调不公正是如何发生的,并将其与新冠肺炎背景联系起来。最后,为了打破这种主导模式,我们恳请研究人员、政府和政策制定者改变他们的话语,将政治行动从干预主义转变为基于支持的合作角色,以确保依赖野生动物贸易的社区和国家获得环境正义。©2022作者。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
期刊介绍: The relationship between human rights and the environment is fascinating, uneasy and increasingly urgent. This international journal provides a strategic academic forum for an extended interdisciplinary and multi-layered conversation that explores emergent possibilities, existing tensions, and multiple implications of entanglements between human and non-human forms of liveliness. We invite critical engagements on these themes, especially as refracted through human rights and environmental law, politics, policy-making and community level activisms.
期刊最新文献
The seabed and the South: from stock stories to new histories of international lawmaking Reimagining climate equity to incorporate the non-human Paradise lost? The red right hand of green technology Expanding NGOs’ standing: climate justice through access to the European Court of Human Rights Book review: Sumudu A Atapattu, Carmen G Gonzalez and Sara L Seck (eds), The Cambridge Handbook of Environmental Justice and Sustainable Development (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2021) 476 pp.
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