The upper Zambesi zone.pdf - 1 views
Ivory and Slaves in East Central Africa - 2 views
Gale pdf MK.pdf - 7 views
TRADE BANS AND WILDLIFE CONSERVATION THE CASE OF AFRICAN ELEPHANT IVORY.pdf - 2 views
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The second main issue is the effect of a trade ban on ivory harvest. Illegal ivory constituted 80% of all ivory traded prior to the CITES ban (ITRG, 1989). It is, therefore, important to understand the determinants of poaching (Milner-Gulland & Leader-Williams, 1992), and especially how poaching is influenced by international trade. A simple model is presented below to demonstrate the interaction between legal and illegal supplies in the international ivory market. The model highlights some unintended side effects of the trade ban, which tend to be neglected in the conservation debate.2
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Thus, the main effects of a trade ban on legal and illegal markets are as follows. One, the moral impact of a trade ban (and associated attention surrounding the plight of the African elephant) is to reduce demand, which leads to lower poaching offtake. The second effect is the withdrawal of official stocks (from culling operations etc) from the markets. This draws up the black market price of ivory and induces more poaching. Third, if a trade ban facilitates additional interceptions of smuggled ivory, this has an ambiguous effect on poaching incentives. Interceptions reduce smugglers' expected price and, hence, the price they are willing to pay poachers for ivory, reducing poaching. However, under a trade ban confiscations cannot be marketed.
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The conclusion is neither that markets for products from threatened natural resources should be liberalised indiscriminately nor that strict trade bans should form the core of conservation efforts. Rather, it should be investigated how legal marketing channels for official stocks can be set up and safeguarded, as in the current system with limited ivory export quotas from a group of Southern African range states. Due attention should be paid to efforts aimed at developing secure techmques to distinguish legal from illegal supplies, i.e. through a product marking system.
retrieve.pdf - 0 views
Orange Free State* - Countries - Office of the Historian - 1 views
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Orange Free State
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The Orange Free State was an independent Boer sovereign republic under British suzerainty in Southern Africa during the second half of the 19th century, which ceased to exist after it was defeated and surrendered to the British Empire at the end of the Second Boer War in 1902. It is one of the three historical precursors to the present-day Free State province.
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The Orange Free State was a Boer republic in southern Africa. The Boers, of Dutch ancestry, had settled the area earlier in the nineteenth century. The 1854 Bloemfontein Convention recognized the independence of the Orange Free State, which was located between the Orange and the Vaal Rivers. The Orange Free State was a republic modeled upon the U.S. constitution, but restricted franchise to white males.
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Southern African Boer nation known as the Orange Free State. Early in the nineteenth century, Dutch immigrants known as Boers inhabited the region. The Orange Free State, positioned between the Orange and Vaal Rivers, was granted independence by the Bloemfontein Convention in 1854. A republic based on the U.S. constitution, the Orange Free State only allowed white men to vote.
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The Orange Free State was a Boer republic in southern Africa. The Boers, of Dutch ancestry, had settled the area earlier in the nineteenth century. The 1854 Bloemfontein Convention recognized the independence of the Orange Free State, which was located between the Orange and the Vaal Rivers. The Orange Free State was a republic modeled upon the U.S. constitution, but restricted franchise to white males.
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Taylor and franscis article.pdf - 2 views
TAYLOR AND FRANCIS.pdf - 3 views
newspaper article.pdf - 2 views
1581287.pdf - 1 views
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The work of the Church Missionary Society (
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on the East African coast by Krapf and Rebma
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that time, the missionaries operated by permissio
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