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The Dilemmas and Solutions for Invasive Alien Species Governance Policy Systems

Xiaofan Cheng1, Qingyuan Li1, Yuanhui Li1,2*, Mingxiang Zhang3,4*   

  1. 1 School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083 

    2 Center for Forestry and Grassland Law Research, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083 

    3 School of Ecology and Nature Conservation, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083 

    4 Nature Reserve Research Center of National Forestry and Grassland Administration, Beijing 100083

  • Received:2025-08-20 Revised:2025-10-27
  • Contact: Yuanhui Li, Mingxiang Zhang

Abstract:

Background & Aim: As the threat posed by invasive alien species to China's ecosystems becomes increasingly severe, improving the governance system has emerged as a crucial issue at present. Although existing studies have explored legal and administrative management issues in the governance of invasive alien species, most of these studies focus on governance discussions within a single field and fail to conduct systematic analysis from the perspective of the overall policy system. Therefore, in-depth research on the structural dilemmas existing in the policy system for invasive alien species governance—especially the exploration of its holistic construction—still holds significant academic value and practical significance. 

Method: Employing literature review and case analysis methods, this paper compiles public interest litigation cases related to invasive alien species in recent years, introduces judicial cases as practical illustrations, and further demonstrates their actual harms to the ecological environment, public interests, and biological security. 

Results: This paper sorts out the laws and policies regarding invasive alien species in China, and reveals the problems existing in current practice, such as the imperfection of the legal system, the lack of top-level design, the inadequacy of the name list system, the insufficient coordination of the implementation mechanism, and the weakness of basic guarantees and technical support. 

Conclusion: This paper proposes a holistic improvement pathway, which includes the following aspects: at the legislative level, it suggests improving legislation through the “code-specialized law” model, strengthening accountability, and optimizing government assessment mechanisms; at the implementation level, it is necessary to establish regulatory authorities, set up a regional joint meeting mechanism, and optimize name-list management; and at the support and guarantee level, efforts should be made to promote the marketization of ecological compensation, enhance interdisciplinary collaboration, and implement the “project bidding for talent recruitment” mechanism. The purpose of this paper is to provide theoretical and practical references for the governance of invasive alien species.

Key words: invasive alien species, biological invasion, biodiversity, ecological security, legal policies