Elephant Crime Intelligence System Assessment
This assessment concludes that individual nation as well as regional and transnational organizations now have severely limited to nonexistent capacities to effectively respond to growing threat levels. It proposes a networked intelligence-led strat...
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Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
2015
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/03/24171265/elephant-crime-intelligence-system-assessment http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21754 |
Summary: | This assessment concludes that
individual nation as well as regional and transnational
organizations now have severely limited to nonexistent
capacities to effectively respond to growing threat levels.
It proposes a networked intelligence-led strategy at
national, regional, and transnational levels to more
effectively control, reduce, and, more importantly, prevent
the wholesale slaughter into extinction of the African
elephant population within the next decade. It concludes by
outlining the requirements for designing and implementing a
long-term sustainable elephant crime intelligence system,
including the required governance arrangements, and proposes
the roles and functions that key organizations could play at
the national, regional, and transnational levels. Currently,
a robust intelligence system addressing elephant poaching
and illegal trade of ivory at all phases within the
intelligence process is either nonexistent or seriously
limited in capacity (the key phases in the intelligence
process are planning and direction; collection; evaluation;
collation; analysis; reporting/dissemination/action).
Therefore, the project examines the need for designing and
implementing a long-term sustainable elephant crime
intelligence system and governance model as well as
assessing the roles and functions that key organizations
could play at the national, regional, and international
levels within such an intelligence system and accompanying
governance model. |
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