Loading

Description

CITES is an international agreement between governments of 160+ countries.

Joining is voluntary but, once joined, a country has to agree to the rules. The aim is to make sure trade in wild animal and plants doesn’t threaten their survival. Trade in animals and plants and trade in products made from them (foods, leather goods, wooden musical instruments etc.) is worth millions annually. Trade is worldwide so it’s no use just one country trying to stop it – it takes international effort. Once a country has signed the Convention (become a Party to the Convention), it has to use its own domestic laws to provide the required protection.

This Environmental Studies Factsheet:
• Explains how it works.
• Identifies the critics of CITES.
• Includes a Case Study.

Download Type

.PDF (pdf) 497.325 KB

Publication Date

September 2004

ISSN / ISBN

ISSN: 1351-5136

Copyright Disclaimer

The materials published on this website are protected by the Copyright Act of 1988. No part of our online resources may be reproduced or reused for any commercial purpose, or transmitted, in any other form or by any other means, without the prior permission of Curriculum Press Ltd.

Preview
39 Cites

Similar Resources

What our customers say

Find exactly what you’re looking for.

Newsletter
Keep up to date with all the latest news, resources & updates from Curriculum Press