474 R Sollund Species Survival Network [SSN] (2007) Response to the EU Ban on Wild Bird Imports a statement by the species survival network http://www.ssn.org/ Documents/news_articles_EU_bird_ban_EN.htm Accessed 24 November 2015 Tella, J L., & Hiraldo, F (2014) Illegal and legal parrot trade shows a long-term, cross-cultural preference for the most attractive species increasing their risk of extinction PLOS one http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/jour nal.pone.0107546 Accessed 10 August 2015 TRAFFIC (2015) Briefing prepared by TRAFFIC for the European Commission Accessed from http://ec.europa.eu/environment/cites/pdf/Overview%20signifi cant%20seizures%202014.pdf van Uhm, D P (2015) Illegal wildlife trade to the EU and harms to the world In T Spapens, R White, W Huisman (Eds.), Environmental crime and the World Farnham: Ashgate Vialles, N (1994) Animal to edible (trans J.A Underwood) Cambridge: Cambridge University Press Weston, M K., & Memon, M A (2009) The illegal parrot trade in Latin America and its consequences to parrot nutrition, health and conservation Bird Populations, 9, 76–83 Wildlife Extra (2008) African grey parrot numbers in steep decline due to wild bird trade http://www.wildlifeextra.com/go/news/news-africangrey.html#cr Accessed 14 July 2015 Wright, T F., Toft, C A., Enkerlin-Hoeflich, E., Gonzalez-Elizondo, J., Albornoz, M., Rodríguez-Ferraro, A., et al (2001) Nest poaching in neotropical parrots Conservation Biology, 15(3), 710–720 Wyatt, T (2009) Exploring the organization in Russia Far East’s illegal wildlife trade: two case studies of the illegal fur and illegal falcon trades Global Crime, 10(1 and 2), 144–154 Wyatt, T (2011) Illegal raptor trade in the Russian Federation Contemporary Justice Review, 14(2), 103–123 Wyatt, T (2013) Wildlife trafficking: a deconstruction of the crime, the victims, and the offenders London: Palgrave Macmillan Zimmerman, M E (2003) The black market for wildlife: combating transnational organized crime in the illegal wildlife trade Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law IVOL, 36, 1657–1699 Ragnhild Sollund is a professor at the Department of criminology and sociology of law at the University of Oslo She has done extensive research within migration studies, police racial profiling, and in recent years, green criminology She is the editor of Global Harms: Ecological Crime and Speciesism (2008) and Green Harms and Crimes: Critical Criminology in a Changing World (2015); and co-editor of Eco-global Crimes: Contemporary Problems and Future Challenges (2008) She has over the past five years been doing research into wildlife crimes, including trafficking, and is partner to EFFACE; an EU funded project about environmental crimes