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Reverse the Red - Ecocide and wildlife crime law reforms save species!

Why attend
This session will explore how existing and proposed new international laws can be utilized to protect species and ecosystems and ‘reverse the red’, drawing on two experts who have been at the center of the debate on these reforms, Professor Christina Voigt and John Scanlon.
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International laws set a comprehensive framework for protecting species and ecosystems. In the 1970’s a targeted approach was taken, to address trade in species, migratory species, international wetlands and World Heritage Sites. In the 1990’s a more comprehensive approach was adopted through a framework convention on biodiversity. Yet biodiversity continues to decline. Why? As we confront interlinked biodiversity, climate and public health crises, we must explore transformational changes to our system, including changes in the law. Over the past year, two quite distinct and ambitious law reform initiatives have emerged: to add ecocide to the list of international crimes, and to create a new global agreement on wildlife crime.

Session agenda

Speaker

Mr John SCANLON

Chair,
Global Initiative to End Wildlife Crime
Switzerland


15:30 - 16:30

Prof. Christina VOIGT

Professor,
University of Oslo
Norway


15:35 - 16:30

  • IUCN Commission on Ecosystems Management (CEM)
  • IUCN Species Survival Commission (SSC)

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