Laws protecting jaguars include the Endangered Species Act in the United States, which designates them as a threatened species and prohibits harm or trade. In many Latin American countries, jaguars are protected under national wildlife conservation laws that restrict hunting and habitat destruction. Additionally, international agreements like CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species) regulate and monitor international trade to prevent exploitation. These legal frameworks aim to preserve jaguar populations and their habitats.
there are no laws but there should be
yes
that it gets what it wants
If children were all raised to respect everyone, we would need far fewer laws. Some laws were written to increase our safety (e.g. traffic laws) and to protect property from robbery (laws against trespassing, and, of course, stealing). Some laws (Freedom of the Press, Freedom of Speech) were instituted to keep the government from becoming a dictatorship. We need some laws that don't exist, e.g. laws with severe punishment to protect animals from human cruelty.
Lepords & Jagurs
because animals are in danger so people made laws to protect them.
You would need to click on it to see and find out.
they had their own laws to protect people's freedoms.
they had their own laws to protect people's freedoms.
why are rules and laws needed to protect people's possessions
from what?
Many laws were made to protect the ozone. Banning of CFC's is one of them.