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Governance principles for the wildlife trade to reduce spillover and pandemic risk

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Governance principles for the wildlife trade to reduce spillover and pandemic risk. / Biggs, Duan; Peel, Alison J.; Astaras, Christos et al.
In: CABI One Health, Vol. 2023, 1, 31.05.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Biggs, D, Peel, AJ, Astaras, C, Braczkowski, A, Cheung, H, Choi, C-Y, Orume, RD, Cáceres-Escobar, H, Phelps, J, Plowright, RK, Rooyen, J, Velden, J & McCallum, H 2023, 'Governance principles for the wildlife trade to reduce spillover and pandemic risk', CABI One Health, vol. 2023, 1. https://doi.org/10.1079/cabionehealth.2023.0013

APA

Biggs, D., Peel, A. J., Astaras, C., Braczkowski, A., Cheung, H., Choi, C-Y., Orume, R. D., Cáceres-Escobar, H., Phelps, J., Plowright, R. K., Rooyen, J., Velden, J., & McCallum, H. (2023). Governance principles for the wildlife trade to reduce spillover and pandemic risk. CABI One Health, 2023, Article 1. https://doi.org/10.1079/cabionehealth.2023.0013

Vancouver

Biggs D, Peel AJ, Astaras C, Braczkowski A, Cheung H, Choi C-Y et al. Governance principles for the wildlife trade to reduce spillover and pandemic risk. CABI One Health. 2023 May 31;2023:1. doi: 10.1079/cabionehealth.2023.0013

Author

Biggs, Duan ; Peel, Alison J. ; Astaras, Christos et al. / Governance principles for the wildlife trade to reduce spillover and pandemic risk. In: CABI One Health. 2023 ; Vol. 2023.

Bibtex

@article{b27d4ef912104b4e9f309165318cec0a,
title = "Governance principles for the wildlife trade to reduce spillover and pandemic risk",
abstract = "The COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath are the most significant socio-economic crises in modern history. The pandemic{\textquoteright}s devastating impacts have prompted urgent policy and regulatory action to reduce the risks of future spillover events and pandemics. Stronger regulatory measures for the trade of wildlife are central to discussions of a policy response. A variety of measures, including broad bans on the trade and sale of wildlife to banning specific species for human consumption are among a suite of discussed options. However, the wildlife trade is diverse, complex, and important for the livelihoods of millions of people globally. We argue that reducing the risk of future pandemics stemming from the wildlife trade must follow established principles of governance which include being equitable, responsive, robust, and effective. We demonstrate how incorporating these principles will support the development of context-specific, culturally sensitive, and inclusive responses that recognize the on-the-ground complexity of disease emergence and the social-ecological systems in which the wildlife trade occurs.",
author = "Duan Biggs and Peel, {Alison J.} and Christos Astaras and Alexander Braczkowski and Hubert Cheung and Chi-Yeung Choi and Orume, {Robinson Diotoh} and Hern{\'a}n C{\'a}ceres-Escobar and Jacob Phelps and Plowright, {Raina K.} and Jacques Rooyen and Julia Velden and Hamish McCallum",
year = "2023",
month = may,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1079/cabionehealth.2023.0013",
language = "English",
volume = "2023",
journal = "CABI One Health",
issn = "2791-223X",
publisher = "CABI Publishing",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Governance principles for the wildlife trade to reduce spillover and pandemic risk

AU - Biggs, Duan

AU - Peel, Alison J.

AU - Astaras, Christos

AU - Braczkowski, Alexander

AU - Cheung, Hubert

AU - Choi, Chi-Yeung

AU - Orume, Robinson Diotoh

AU - Cáceres-Escobar, Hernán

AU - Phelps, Jacob

AU - Plowright, Raina K.

AU - Rooyen, Jacques

AU - Velden, Julia

AU - McCallum, Hamish

PY - 2023/5/31

Y1 - 2023/5/31

N2 - The COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath are the most significant socio-economic crises in modern history. The pandemic’s devastating impacts have prompted urgent policy and regulatory action to reduce the risks of future spillover events and pandemics. Stronger regulatory measures for the trade of wildlife are central to discussions of a policy response. A variety of measures, including broad bans on the trade and sale of wildlife to banning specific species for human consumption are among a suite of discussed options. However, the wildlife trade is diverse, complex, and important for the livelihoods of millions of people globally. We argue that reducing the risk of future pandemics stemming from the wildlife trade must follow established principles of governance which include being equitable, responsive, robust, and effective. We demonstrate how incorporating these principles will support the development of context-specific, culturally sensitive, and inclusive responses that recognize the on-the-ground complexity of disease emergence and the social-ecological systems in which the wildlife trade occurs.

AB - The COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath are the most significant socio-economic crises in modern history. The pandemic’s devastating impacts have prompted urgent policy and regulatory action to reduce the risks of future spillover events and pandemics. Stronger regulatory measures for the trade of wildlife are central to discussions of a policy response. A variety of measures, including broad bans on the trade and sale of wildlife to banning specific species for human consumption are among a suite of discussed options. However, the wildlife trade is diverse, complex, and important for the livelihoods of millions of people globally. We argue that reducing the risk of future pandemics stemming from the wildlife trade must follow established principles of governance which include being equitable, responsive, robust, and effective. We demonstrate how incorporating these principles will support the development of context-specific, culturally sensitive, and inclusive responses that recognize the on-the-ground complexity of disease emergence and the social-ecological systems in which the wildlife trade occurs.

U2 - 10.1079/cabionehealth.2023.0013

DO - 10.1079/cabionehealth.2023.0013

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2023

JO - CABI One Health

JF - CABI One Health

SN - 2791-223X

M1 - 1

ER -