All Stories

  1. Coexistence beyond disciplinary silos: Five dimensions of analysis for more convivial human-predator interactions
  2. A harms-based political ecology: Understanding harms through the wildlife trade
  3. Book review: Audra Mitchell, Revenant ecologies: Defying the violence of extinction and conservation MitchellAudra, Revenant ecologies: Defying the violence of extinction and conservation (University of Minnesota Press, 2023).
  4. International Relations and the non-human: Exploring animal culture for global environmental governance
  5. Harms and the Illegal Wildlife Trade: Political Ecology, Green Criminology and the European Eel
  6. Political ecologies of green-collar crime: understanding illegal trades in European wildlife
  7. Political ecology of security: tackling the illegal wildlife trade
  8. Disaster Making in the Capitalocene
  9. Crime, Security, and Illegal Wildlife Trade: Political Ecologies of International Conservation
  10. Challenges and perspectives on tackling illegal or unsustainable wildlife trade
  11. The Integration of Conservation and Security
  12. From Racialized Neocolonial Global Conservation to an Inclusive and Regenerative Conservation
  13. Conservation in violent environments: Introduction to a special issue on the political ecology of conservation amidst violent conflict
  14. Transformation beyond conservation: how critical social science can contribute to a radical new agenda in biodiversity conservation
  15. Understanding drivers of demand, researching consumption of illegal wildlife products: A reply to Bergin et al.
  16. Conservation and crime convergence? Situating the 2018 London Illegal Wildlife Trade Conference
  17. The imaginary ‘Asian Super Consumer’: A critique of demand reduction campaigns for the illegal wildlife trade
  18. Transnational environmental crime threatens sustainable development
  19. Why we must question the militarisation of conservation
  20. Working governance for working land
  21. Conflict ecologies: Connecting political ecology and peace and conflict studies
  22. Poaching, Wildlife Trafficking and Security in Africa
  23. Doing Whole Earth justice: a reply to Cafaro et al.
  24. Half-Earth or Whole Earth? Radical ideas for conservation, and their implications
  25. Research ethics: Assuring anonymity at the individual level may not be sufficient to protect research participants from harm
  26. War, by Conservation
  27. I. Poaching, Wildlife Trafficking and Human Security
  28. Toward a new understanding of the links between poverty and illegal wildlife hunting
  29. Nature-based tourism and neoliberalism: concealing contradictions
  30. The militarization of anti-poaching: undermining long term goals?
  31. Mapping donors: Key areas for tackling illegal wildlife trade (Asia and Africa)
  32. Changing the intellectual climate
  33. What Does Collaborative Event Ethnography Tell Us About Global Environmental Governance?
  34. Waging a war to save biodiversity: the rise of militarized conservation
  35. Biology's drones: Undermined by fear
  36. Interactive elephants: Nature, tourism and neoliberalism
  37. Rhino poaching: How do we respond?
  38. The Ecotourism-Extraction Nexus
  39. Poverty, poaching and trafficking: what are the links?
  40. New rhino conservation project in South Africa to understand landowner decision-making
  41. A Trip Too Far
  42. The international political economy of tourism and the neoliberalisation of nature: Challenges posed by selling close interactions with animals
  43. Global Environmental Governance and North—South Dynamics: The Case of the Cites
  44. Nature Unbound
  45. Governing climate change transnationally: assessing the evidence from a database of sixty initiatives
  46. Introduction: Capitalism and Conservation: The Production and Reproduction of Biodiversity Conservation
  47. Capitalism and Conservation
  48. Neoliberalising Nature? Elephant‐Back Tourism in Thailand and Botswana
  49. Global Networks in Conservation: The Politics of Engagement between States, Civil Society and the World Bank
  50. Global regulations and local practices: the politics and governance of animal welfare in elephant tourism
  51. Your role in wildlife crime
  52. Capitalism and Conservation: The Production and Reproduction of Biodiversity Conservation
  53. Neoliberalising Nature? Elephant‐Back Tourism in Thailand and Botswana
  54. Responsible tourism: critical issues for conservation and development
  55. Shadow States: Globalization, Criminalization, and Environmental Change
  56. Global Shadows: Africa in the neoliberal world order by James Ferguson Durham, NC and London: Duke University Press, 2006. Pp. 257, £13.95 (pbk.).
  57. Neoliberalising Nature: Global Networks and Ecotourism Development in Madagasgar
  58. Gemstone mining in Madagascar: transnational networks, criminalisation and global integration
  59. Non-governmental organisations and governance states: The impact of transnational environmental management networks in Madagascar
  60. Global Environmental Governance and the Politics of Ecotourism in Madagascar
  61. The Politics of Ecotourism and the Developing World
  62. Global Governance, Criminalisation and Environmental Change
  63. The potential and pitfalls of global environmental governance: The politics of transfrontier conservation areas in Southern Africa
  64. Global Environmental Governance and the Challenge of Shadow States: The Impact of Illicit Sapphire Mining in Madagascar
  65. The politics of global environmental governance: the powers and limitations of transfrontier conservation areas in Central America
  66. Tourism Mobilities
  67. Intervention and Transnationalism in Africa: global–local networks of power edited by T. CALLAGHY, R. KASSIMIR and R. LATHAM Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. Pp. 336. £47.50; £17.95 (pbk).
  68. The Ethics of Tourism Development
  69. A Provocative Dependence? The Global Financial System and Small Island Tax Havens
  70. Conclusion: Global Governance, Conflict and Resistance
  71. Global Environmental Governance and Local Resistance: The Global Trade in ivory
  72. Global Governance, Conflict and Resistance
  73. Peace parks: The paradox of globalisation1
  74. Politicians and Poachers: the political economy of wildlife policy in Africa by CLARK C. GIBSON Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. Pp. 245. £40.00, £14.95 (pbk.).
  75. Shadow players: Ecotourism development, corruption and state politics in Belize
  76. The role and limitations of state coercion: Anti‐poaching policies in Zimbabwe
  77. The environmental challenge to the nation‐state: superparks and national parks policy in Zimbabwe