ID | 186139 |
Title Proper | To ban or not to ban |
Other Title Information | China’s trade in endangered species |
Language | ENG |
Author | Song, Annie Young ; Yao, Yanran |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This study explores the conditions under which China complies with the international norms of banning the trade in endangered species using tiger bones and ivory cases. Why did China ban the ivory trade but attempt to allow the trade in tiger derivatives? The authors traced the key policies formulated by Chinese policymakers during 1981–2018. Drawing upon norm localization theory, the authors find that domestic policy preferences played a key role in linking domestic and international norms. Chinese policymakers actively chose ideas to advance their policy preferences, and this localization process reaches beyond a static fitting process between domestic-international norms. This finding has implications for wildlife policies in developing countries and sheds light on China’s wildlife policy development following the outbreak of coronavirus. |
`In' analytical Note | Journal of Contemporary China Vol. 31, No.133; Jan 2022: p.153-167 |
Journal Source | Journal of Contemporary China Vol: 31 No 133 |
Key Words | Trade ; China ; International Norms ; Localization Theory ; Ivory Trade |