Book contents
- CITES as a Tool for Sustainable Development
- Treaty Implementation for Sustainable Development
- CITES as a Tool for Sustainable Development
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Boxes
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface by CITES Secretary-General, Ivonne Higuero
- Foreword by Honorable Judge Antonio H. Benjamin
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Part I Endangered Species, Sustainable Development and the Law
- Part II Sustainable Development in Law and Policy on Endangered Species
- Part III Global Implementation of CITES by Key Species/Commodity
- Part IV National Implementation of CITES
- 11 Sustainable Enterprise Development: Protection of Endangered Species in Omo and Other Potential Biosphere Reserves
- 12 The Biodiversity Multilateral Environmental Agreements Matrix in India: Synergies, Implementation Status and Future Challenges
- 13 Tanzania’s Fight Against Illegal Ivory Trade: Law-Enforcement Failures and Noncompliance with International Environmental Laws
- 14 The Impact of the CITES COP 12 2002 Decision on Mahogany on Peru’s Timber Trade
- 15 Strengthening CITES Compliance: Improving the Management of Resources Preservation and Cross-Border Wildlife Trade in China
- 16 How to Reverse the Fallacy of Command-and-Control in Combating Illegal Trade of Exotic Pets in Brazil
- 17 Lessons on Sustainable Development and Challenges to Illegal Trade: The Case of the Chilean Larch
- 18 The Return of the Markhor: Why CITES Matters
- 19 New Technologies for Effective Biodiversity Governance: Lessons from Orangutans in Indonesia
- 20 Regulation of Import of Hunting Trophies of Exotic Species into India by Framing a Look-Alike Policy to Conserve Indigenous Wild Fauna
- 21 Legislation for the Control of the Timber Trade in the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Congo Basin
- 22 To List or Not to List: Governance Challenges and Complexities in Global Frankincense Supply Chains
- Part V Emerging Issues and Synergies for CITES in the Context of Sustainable Development
- Part VI Conclusions
- Cases and Court Decisions
- CITES Resolutions and Documents
- Domestic Acts and Regulations
- Multilateral Treaties and Declarations
- Recommended Resources
16 - How to Reverse the Fallacy of Command-and-Control in Combating Illegal Trade of Exotic Pets in Brazil
from Part IV - National Implementation of CITES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 July 2023
- CITES as a Tool for Sustainable Development
- Treaty Implementation for Sustainable Development
- CITES as a Tool for Sustainable Development
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Boxes
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface by CITES Secretary-General, Ivonne Higuero
- Foreword by Honorable Judge Antonio H. Benjamin
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Part I Endangered Species, Sustainable Development and the Law
- Part II Sustainable Development in Law and Policy on Endangered Species
- Part III Global Implementation of CITES by Key Species/Commodity
- Part IV National Implementation of CITES
- 11 Sustainable Enterprise Development: Protection of Endangered Species in Omo and Other Potential Biosphere Reserves
- 12 The Biodiversity Multilateral Environmental Agreements Matrix in India: Synergies, Implementation Status and Future Challenges
- 13 Tanzania’s Fight Against Illegal Ivory Trade: Law-Enforcement Failures and Noncompliance with International Environmental Laws
- 14 The Impact of the CITES COP 12 2002 Decision on Mahogany on Peru’s Timber Trade
- 15 Strengthening CITES Compliance: Improving the Management of Resources Preservation and Cross-Border Wildlife Trade in China
- 16 How to Reverse the Fallacy of Command-and-Control in Combating Illegal Trade of Exotic Pets in Brazil
- 17 Lessons on Sustainable Development and Challenges to Illegal Trade: The Case of the Chilean Larch
- 18 The Return of the Markhor: Why CITES Matters
- 19 New Technologies for Effective Biodiversity Governance: Lessons from Orangutans in Indonesia
- 20 Regulation of Import of Hunting Trophies of Exotic Species into India by Framing a Look-Alike Policy to Conserve Indigenous Wild Fauna
- 21 Legislation for the Control of the Timber Trade in the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Congo Basin
- 22 To List or Not to List: Governance Challenges and Complexities in Global Frankincense Supply Chains
- Part V Emerging Issues and Synergies for CITES in the Context of Sustainable Development
- Part VI Conclusions
- Cases and Court Decisions
- CITES Resolutions and Documents
- Domestic Acts and Regulations
- Multilateral Treaties and Declarations
- Recommended Resources
Summary
The author begins by noting that Brazil ranks in second place when it comes to the number of wildlife species under threat. The main causes of the decline in wildlife populations in Brazil are: loss/reduction of habitat; increased human occupation; economic exploitation of forest and wetland areas; wildlife trafficking; and hunting. The 1988 Constitution of Brazil establishes the obligation of the Federal government to enact environmental criminal legislation. The Federal Law n. 9.605/1998 (also known as the Environmental Criminal Law) used command-and-control as an attempt to halt environmental crimes. The author argues that the majority of the environmental crimes described in this law allows for execution of agreements between prosecutor and the violator to minimize penalty and avoid incarceration
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- CITES as a Tool for Sustainable Development , pp. 275 - 290Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023