Summary information

Study title

Metadata for the Beastly Business Project: Illegal Wildlife Trade, 2021-2023

Creator

Duffy, R, University of Sheffield
Iordachescu, G, University of Sheffield
Hutchinson, A, University of Sheffield
Lappe-Osthege, T, University of Sheffield
Gutierrez, L, University of Liverpool
Burns, C, University of Sheffield

Study number / PID

856776 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-856776 (DOI)

Data access

Information not available

Series

Not available

Abstract

The Beastly Business Project focused on IWT in European species, specifically the trade in European brown bears, European eels and songbirds. It delivered new empirical data and a novel analytical framework that synthesises the strengths of two key approaches – political ecology and green criminology. Europe is a key area for sourcing, consuming and transporting wildlife, but this is overlooked in academic and policy debates; instead IWT tends to be presented as a problem of Africa and Asia. In policies to tackle IWT Europe is often identified only as a transit route for wildlife products trafficked from source (typically assumed to be Africa) to consumer (typically assumed to be Asia). This misses the importance of IWT within Europe and in European species. Focusing on IWT in Europe is important because it is a key driver of biodiversity loss, and it has become a prominent policy issue in the EU. Due to ethical constrains the data cannot be shared outside of the project group.

The Beastly Business Project focused on IWT in European species, specifically the trade in European brown bears, European eels and songbirds. It delivered new empirical data and a novel analytical framework that synthesises the strengths of two key approaches – political ecology and green criminology. Europe is a key area for sourcing, consuming and transporting wildlife, but this is overlooked in academic and policy debates; instead IWT tends to be presented as a problem of Africa and Asia. In policies to tackle IWT Europe is often identified only as a transit route for wildlife products trafficked from source (typically assumed to be Africa) to consumer (typically assumed to be Asia). This misses the importance of IWT within Europe and in European species. Focusing on IWT in Europe is important because it is a key driver of biodiversity loss, and it has become a prominent policy issue in the EU.

Methodology

Data collection period

01/04/2021 - 31/07/2023

Country

United Kingdom, Romania, Slovakia, Italy, Cyprus, Belgium, Germany, Hungary

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Individual
Organization
Event/process

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Text
Audio

Data collection mode

The team conducted semi structured 76 interviews, undertook participant observation, archival research and attended several meetings on wildlife trade. Fieldwork was carried out in Romania, Slovakia, Hungary, Cyprus, Italy, Belgium, UK and Germany. The team also drew on methods from environmental humanities to develop animal biographies and storytelling to enrich the research. The first 8 months of the project were affected by COVID restrictions across Europe which delayed the start of face-to-face interviewing and fieldwork. All team members submitted an application for ethical approval via the Department of Politics and International Relations; the ethical approval process is overseen by the University Research Ethics Committee.

Funding information

Grant number

ES/V00929X/1

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2023

Terms of data access

The Data Collection only consists of metadata and documentation as the data could not be archived due to legal, ethical or commercial constraints. For further information, please contact the contact person for this data collection.

Related publications

Not available