My interest in this topic started when I was heading the BirdLife programme in Indonesia and working with the government conservation agency to promote sustainability in the parrot trade. Between 2005 and 2008 I led an applied research project looking at ways to governing the impacts of the hugley popular Indonesian passtime of songbird keeping.
Popular
Jepson, P. 2014. Journey of a thrush Steller Story
Academic and policy
Jepson, P.R. 2016 Saving a species threatened by trade: a network study of Bali starling Leucopsar rothschildi conservation. Oryx, 50(3): 480-488.
Jepson, P., Ladle, R.J. and Sujatnika 2011 Assessing market-based conservation governance approaches: a socio-economic profile of Indonesian markets for wild birds. Oryx, 45(4): 482-491.
Kristianto, I. and Jepson, P. 2011 Harvesting Orange-headed Thrush Zoothera citrina chicks in Bali, Indonesia: magnitude, practices and sustainability. Oryx, 45(4): 492-499.
Jepson, P., Prana, M., Sujatnika and Amama, F. 2009 Developing a certification system for captive-bred birds in Indonesia. TRAFFIC Bulletin.
Jepson, P. and Ladle, R.J. 2009 Governing bird-keeping in Java and Bali: evidence from a household survey. Oryx, 43(3): 364-374.
Jepson, P. (2008) Orange-headed thrush and the avian X-factor. Birding Asia, 9: 58-60.
Jepson, P. and Cooney, R (2006) The need for flexibility in wildlife trade policy: a response to Burton. Oryx, 40(3): 261-265.
Cooney, R. and Jepson, P. (2006) The international wild bird trade: what’s wrong with blanket bans? Oryx, 40(1): 18-23.
Jepson, P. and Ladle, R. (2005) Bird-keeping in Indonesia. Conservation impacts and the potential for substitution-based conservation responses. Oryx, 39(4): 442-449. Appendices