TY - JOUR
T1 - The elephant in the courtroom: an analysis of the Ivory Act 2018, its path to enactment and potential impact on the illegal trade in ivory
AU - Cox, Caroline
N1 - 18 months embargo. This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of International Wildlife Law and Policy on 21 June 2021 available online: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13880292.2021.1933721
PY - 2021/6/21
Y1 - 2021/6/21
N2 - On the 20th December 2019, Royal Assent was granted to the Ivory Act 2018. The legislation, introduced by Environment Secretary, Michael Gove on the 23 May 2018 was welcomed by politicians and conservation groups as “an extraordinary achievement” and “a landmark in our fight to protect wildlife and the environment”. In passing through the Parliamentary process in only seven months, the Ivory Act was testament to the cross party commitment to tackling the illegal ivory trade, however, its path to enactment has not been plain sailing. Following Royal Assent, the Ivory Act was the subject of a judicial review, brought by a company set up for the purpose by a group of antiques dealers, The Friends of Antique Cultural Treasures Limited. While the Ivory Act is now considered amongst the strictest ivory trade legislation in the world, this paper considers its path to enactment, its likely impact on the trade in ivory artefacts in the U.K. and whether the Act can fulfil the British Government’s aim to make it “one of the toughest bans on the planet”.
AB - On the 20th December 2019, Royal Assent was granted to the Ivory Act 2018. The legislation, introduced by Environment Secretary, Michael Gove on the 23 May 2018 was welcomed by politicians and conservation groups as “an extraordinary achievement” and “a landmark in our fight to protect wildlife and the environment”. In passing through the Parliamentary process in only seven months, the Ivory Act was testament to the cross party commitment to tackling the illegal ivory trade, however, its path to enactment has not been plain sailing. Following Royal Assent, the Ivory Act was the subject of a judicial review, brought by a company set up for the purpose by a group of antiques dealers, The Friends of Antique Cultural Treasures Limited. While the Ivory Act is now considered amongst the strictest ivory trade legislation in the world, this paper considers its path to enactment, its likely impact on the trade in ivory artefacts in the U.K. and whether the Act can fulfil the British Government’s aim to make it “one of the toughest bans on the planet”.
KW - Elephant ivory
KW - wildlife legislation
KW - conservation
KW - judicial review
KW - antique ivory
U2 - 10.1080/13880292.2021.1933721
DO - 10.1080/13880292.2021.1933721
M3 - Article
SN - 1388-0292
JO - Journal of International Wildlife Law and Policy
JF - Journal of International Wildlife Law and Policy
ER -