Over the last 30 years, Community Conservation Inc. has worked with many local groups, conservation leaders, and organizations in our efforts to involve local communities in conservation. We aren’t the only ones who see local communities as the best hope for conserving biodiversity.
But over the years we noticed there isn’t much connection among these groups.
So we formed a group of past and current partners to meet regularly and share ideas. The new Partner Network includes Community Conservation’s current and past partners from all over the world.
In this group, conservationists can problem-solve together and share what has worked best for them. The beauty of community-based conservation is that it’s flexible enough to work anywhere in the world, but this also can make it complicated. The ecosystems can be very different. Plus, human cultural practices, existing conservation efforts, and policies and laws can all vary.
Community Conservation has always been a resource to our local partner organizations, but now they are a resource for each other, too.
Meet the Partner Network
Olivia Cosby
Project Coordinator, Malaysia
Olivia Cosby is working to combine conservation and community outreach while conducting fieldwork in Sarawak, a state located on the island of Borneo, Malaysia. Through workshops and hands-on fieldwork, Olivia teaches people from local longhouse communities how to map land boundaries and check trail cameras. She is an MS student affiliated with the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies and a fellow of the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute.
Sam Helle
tiger biologist and CoFounder, Project Conservation, Nepal
Sam is a conservation biologist and current PhD student at University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her research primarily focuses on tiger conservation, human-wildlife conflict mitigation, and community-based conservation initiatives in Nepal. She is currently working on training communities to do camera trapping and wildlife monitoring.
Birendra Mahato
Founder, Community Conservation Nepal
Birendra Mahato is director and founding chairperson of the Tharu Cultural Museum and Research Center in Chitwan, and Community Conservation Nepal (CCN). He has also worked with Green Society Nepal. He works on a variety of community-based projects in the buffer zone of Chitwan National Park and southern Nepal.
Denis Ndeloh
Founder, Community-based biosynergy management, Cameroon
Denis is the founder and President of Community-Based Biosynergy Management (CBBM). He holds a doctorate degree in Human Ecology at the Vrije University of Brussels, Belgium. He has extensive experience in the study and conservation of Cross River gorillas in Cameroon. He has also worked with Ba’aka pygmies in East Cameroon on great apes conservation and livelihood issues. He is also Director of Wildlife at the Nunavut Wildlife Management Board, in Nunavut, Canada.
Rose Ragai
Wildlife Officer, Sarawak Forestry Corporation, Malaysia
Rose is a Wildlife Officer for Fauna (Terrestrial) Research and Conservation Section with Sarawak Forestry Corporation. Over the last 16 years, she has gained experience in various field inventories and monitoring of different taxa (i.e. mammals, birds, amphibian, reptiles, insects and plants). She is very interested in integrating the knowledge of biological diversity with the local communities livelihood, in order to achieve sustainable development.
Focus species: Bornean orangutan
Sam Shanee
Founder and Projects Director, Neotropical Primate Conservation, Peru
Before establishing NPC, Sam worked on various wildlife rescue and reintroduction projects in South America, Asia and the Middle East. Sam has an MSc in Primate Conservation and a PhD in the conservation and ecology of Andean primates. Since 2007 he has been in South America carrying out conservation and research in Peru, Ecuador and Colombia. He tries to bridge the gap between academia and activism.
Khine Khine Swe
Executive Director, Friends of Wildlife, Myanmar
Khine Khine Swe has worked for CC’s partner organization in Myanmar, Friends of Wildlife, since its inception and has been its Executive Director for two years. There are very few women executive directors of nonprofit organizations in Myanmar. She has over 14 years of experience working with local communities on conservation projects, and she has a BA in geography from Mandalay University and an MA in geography from Yadanabon University.
Jessie Young, President
President, The Community Baboon Sanctuary Women’s Conservation Group, Belize
Jessie Young founded and leads the Community Baboon Sanctuary Women’s Conservation Group (CBSWCG), a group made up of a female representative from each of the eight communities involved in the sanctuary. She is also a Community Development Officer for the Belize Red Cross, founder of the Harmony Preschool, a past community rep on the Protected Areas Conservation Trust board, a mediation/conflict management facilitator, and Founding member of the Association of Protected Areas Management Organization, and a Member of the Task Force Maya Forest Corridor. She has received the Commonwealth Points of Light Award, Woman of the Year award for community development work, the James A. Waight Award, and the Equator Prize. Jessie Young’s late husband, Fallet A. Young, co-founded the Community Baboon Sanctuary in the 80’s with Community Conservation Inc.’s founder, Rob Horwich. The sanctuary is now managed by the CBSWCG, led by Jessie.