Environmental Crime and Climate Security Programme
This theme focuses on the multifaceted relationship between climate change, environmental and human security, activism, and organised crime.
This programme of research, events and capacity-building activities is dedicated to understanding and combatting global environmental security challenges. Our ground-breaking work has driven policy change and mainstream understanding of the intersections of illicit finance, conflict and corruption with environmental crime, including the illegal wildlife trade; illegal, unregulated and unreported fishing; the illicit exploitation of natural resources; and timber trafficking. Furthermore, our work encompasses cross-cutting issues of climate change and energy security.
In addition to research and policy, activities have included practical capacity-building to improve societal responses to problems of local and global significance. Future priorities include leveraging best practice and key learnings in neglected jurisdictions, as well as pioneering novel research into water security; the energy transition and corruption; timber and waste trafficking; and other environmental harms in a warming world.
Research areas
Strategic Hub for Organised Crime Research (SHOC)
SHOC aims to bring together academics, practitioners and policymakers to create a collaborative network of experts, working to improve understanding of and responses to organised crime, policing challenges, and environmental crime and climate security.
Illegal Wildlife Trade
The global illegal wildlife trade is a £17-billion illicit economy that drives species extinction and habitat destruction, threatening biodiversity and humanity worldwide through the unsustainable use of natural resources, ecosystem impacts and the acceleration of climate change. The proceeds of wildlife crime fuel illicit financial flows, driving economic and democratic instability.
RUSI’s work in this area focuses on strengthening our response to wildlife-related corruption and money laundering, developing effective legal and policy frameworks, understanding and improving deterrence, and building capacity and collaborative efforts across the public and private sectors to target the real beneficiaries of the crime.
Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported Fishing
We investigate the environmental harms and criminal drivers of illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing. To-date, RUSI’s research has demonstrated that IUU fishing activity takes places on an organised, systematic scale across multiple jurisdictions. Drawing on various research projects, our programme seeks to strengthen the global response to this security challenge by examining past interventions and predicting future trends to offer a more comprehensive understanding of the obstacles to – and opportunities for – effective action.
Climate Security
We carry out research on the evolving impact of global warming on our environmental security, examining the changing dynamics of environmental crime and other anthropogenic harms. To-date, most global research and practical action has focused on addressing current environmental harms endangering species worldwide. However, RUSI’s trailblazing research advances our understanding of these current dynamics and looks ahead to identify and address future challenges in recognition of climate change being a threat multiplier.
Water Security
Water security has become increasingly critical in a warming world, and this newly created programme aims to expand RUSI’s role in this forward-thinking area of research. Water is a critical resource not only for agriculture, but also for sanitation and industry. Past RUSI research has focused on marine systems and aquaculture, and future research also hopes to dive into waste, resource scarcity, and conflict.
Natural Resource Exploitation
This research bridges the many other facets of environmental harms and crimes such as timber, waste and mining, all of which can contribute to water, energy and food security challenges as well as accelerating climate change and driving economic and governmental instability. Environmental crime has surpassed the illegal small arms trade in value, and over half of this comes from illegal logging and deforestation. A major strength of RUSI’s research in this area comes from understanding how such exploitation intersects with many other thematic areas of expertise, such as illicit financial flows, international conflict, and terrorism.
Projects
View projects related to this programme of work.
Closed projects
Our experts
Anne-Marie Weeden
Senior Research Fellow | SHOC Network Member - Researcher
Organised Crime and Policing
Dr Liam O’Shea
Former RUSI Senior Research Fellow
Dan Marks
Research Fellow for Energy Security
Cyber
Elijah Glantz
Research Analyst and Project Officer
Organised Crime and Policing
Jennifer Scotland
Research Analyst
Organised Crime and Policing
Mark Williams
Programme Manager | SHOC Network Member - Researcher
Organised Crime and Policing
Dr Jessica White
Acting Director of Terrorism and Conflict Studies
Terrorism and Conflict
Claudia Wallner
Research Fellow
Fellows
Dr Tobias Borck
Senior Associate Fellow
Professor Lorraine Elliott
Senior Associate Fellow - Expert in environmental crime, climate and environmental security
Genevieve Kotarska
Associate Fellow | SHOC Network Member - Researcher
Alexandria Reid
Associate Fellow | SHOC Network Member - Researcher
Dr Timothy Wittig
Associate Fellow - Expert on wildlife trafficking, illicit economies, and terrorist/threat finance