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1. Money laundering and terrorist finance
- Prof. Nikos Passas
- Archived Lectures *These may not cover the latest advances in the field
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2. Nigerian organized crime
- Prof. Phil Williams
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3. Trafficking in diamonds
- Prof. Dina Siegel
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4. Illicit small arms and light weapons
- Ms. Rachel Stohl
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5. Nuclear trafficking
- Dr. Lyudmila Zaitseva
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6. 'Organized crime' in Russia and Eastern Europe: from rhetoric to reality
- Dr. Patricia Rawlinson
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7. Transnational crime : trafficking in antiquities
- Dr. Simon Mackenzie
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8. Corruption and transnational crime
- Mr. Rob McCusker
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9. Tackling transnational crime
- Mr. Rob McCusker
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10. Trafficking in human beings: phenomenon and counter-measures
- Dr. Andrea Di Nicola
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12. Organized crime in Asia
- Prof. Richard Ward
- Prof. Daniel Mabrey
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13. Organized crime in North America
- Prof. Jay Albanese
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14. Trafficking in human organs in Europe
- Ms. Silke Meyer
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15. Combating wildlife crime
- Mr. John M. Sellar
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16. Asset tracing and recovery
- Mr. Alan McQuillan
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17. Organized crime in Europe
- Dr. Klaus von Lampe
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18. Drug trafficking in the Golden Triangle
- Prof. Sheldon Zhang
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19. Defining the relationship of crime and terrorism
- Prof. Louise Shelley
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20. Transnational environmental crime
- Dr. Lorraine Elliott
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21. Globalization and the growth of transnational crime
- Prof. David Nelken
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22. Cyber crime: the global dimension
- Prof. Peter Grabosky
Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- What is CITES? (1)
- What is CITES? (2)
- How CITES works (1)
- Tha goal of CITES
- How CITES works - appendix I
- How CITES works - appendix II
- How CITES works - appendix III
- How CITES works (2)
- Why is there illegal trade? (1)
- Why is there illegal trade? (2)
- Where is the wildlife going?
- The bushmeat trade
- The caviar trade
- The falconry trade
- The fashion industry
- The fur trade
- The ivory trade
- The pet trade
- The plant trade
- The reptile trade
- The timber trade
- The traditional medicine trade
- The zoo/exhibition/circus trade
- How does the wildlife get there?
- Smuggling
- Fraud - abuse of CITES documents
- Can we stop wildlife crime?
- The harsh reality of targeting airports
- The harsh reality of targeting sea/container ports
- The harsh reality of targeting express carriers
- What we're up against
- The involvment of organized crime
- Indicators of organized crime (1)
- Indicators of organized crime (2)
- What do we need?
- Awareness
- Actions of appropriate agencies
- Forensic science
- Prosecutions and adequate penalties
- Increased international collaboration
- What is CITES doing?
- The CITES secretariat
- CITES national legislation project
- In situ verification and assesment missions
- Specialized missions
- CITES secretariat's work with UN agencies
- Memorandums of understanding
- Alerts
- Training
- Training material
- Awareness raising (1)
- Awareness raising (2)
- CITES certificate of commendation
- Not all is bad news
Topics Covered
- CITES
- The convention regulating trade in endangered species
- Illegal trade
- The wildlife that is traded illegally, how it is traded and its markets
- Organized crime
- Indicators of organized crime and criminal networks
- Responses
- What needs to be done and what is being done
Talk Citation
Sellar, J.M. (2008, November 3). Combating wildlife crime [Video file]. In The Business & Management Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/BYIO5648.Export Citation (RIS)