Writing For Conservation Projects

Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.

  • View profile for Rhett Ayers Butler
    Rhett Ayers Butler Rhett Ayers Butler is an Influencer

    Founder and CEO of Mongabay, a nonprofit organization that delivers news and inspiration from Nature’s frontline via a global network of reporters.

    71,543 followers

    Conservation’s unfinished business Conservation is often framed as a technical exercise: how much land to protect, which species to prioritize, what policies deliver measurable gains. A recent paper, led by Moreangels Mbizah, argues that this framing overlooks a deeper constraint. Many of the field’s most persistent problems stem from how power, history, and exclusion continue to shape conservation practice. The paper traces modern conservation’s institutional roots to the colonial era, when protected areas were frequently established through the removal or restriction of Indigenous peoples & rural communities. Land was treated as empty, and local use as degradation. While conservation has changed since then, the authors argue that these early assumptions were never fully dismantled. They persist in subtler forms, influencing who defines conservation priorities, whose knowledge counts as expertise, and who absorbs the costs of protection. One consequence is the continued marginalization of Indigenous peoples & local communities. These groups are often labeled as stakeholders or beneficiaries, rather than rights-holders with authority over their lands. Consultation may occur, but usually after decisions are already set. Participation is often limited to implementation, not governance. Even projects presented as inclusive can reproduce older hierarchies if power remains concentrated elsewhere. The paper puts these concerns within the current push to expand protected areas. Such targets, it notes, are not inherently unjust. They could support Indigenous-managed territories & community-led conservation. But where legal systems fail to recognize customary land rights, the expansion of protected areas risks reinforcing state control & repeating past harms, even when ecological outcomes appear positive. The authors also examine how conservation narratives value lives differently. Campaigns aimed at wealthy countries often emphasize the moral worth of wildlife, while paying less attention to the risks borne by people living alongside animals. When conflict occurs, local injury may receive limited attention compared to the killing of a charismatic species. The paper argues that these asymmetries reflect deeper processes of othering that shape whose suffering is acknowledged. To address such patterns, the authors propose the RACE framework, which is offered as a way for institutions to examine their own assumptions. It emphasizes respect for human rights, meaningful local authority, accountability when harm occurs, and greater awareness of conservation’s own history. The paper’s conclusion is restrained: conservation alone cannot resolve social inequity, but ignoring how inequality is embedded in conservation practice undermines both justice and effectiveness. Conservation, they argue, is ultimately about relationships. When those relationships are treated as secondary, ecological gains are often fragile, and conflict becomes harder to avoid.

  • View profile for David Carlin
    David Carlin David Carlin is an Influencer

    Turning climate complexity into competitive advantage for financial institutions | Future Perfect methodology | Ex-UNEP FI Head of Risk | Open to keynote speaking

    182,345 followers

    🔥Another terrific release from NYC Climate Week! A powerful and practical report on the whole-of-system change required to deliver the climate transition. Taking the lead on climate action and sustainable development is a guide from CETEx (Centre for Economic Transition Expertise) authored by a number of leading lights in sustainable finance including: Mark Manning, Perrine Toledano, Lisa Sachs, Riona Bowhay, Tom Tayler, Agnieszka (Aga) Smoleńska, PhD, Megan Bowman, FIONA STEWART, Peter Knaack, Harald Walkate The report advocates for government leadership at the centre of a whole-of-system response to the urgent challenges of climate change and sustainable development. It recognizes that government policy is critical to drive private sector action and shows how governments can seize the opportunity to take targeted action and catalyse positive tipping points. The report develops a set of principles-based recommendations for national transition planning - reinterpreting the frameworks of Transition Plan Taskforce (TPT) Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero (GFANZ) for a national-level context, and also drawing insights from the Transition Pathway Initiative (TPI) ASCOR. 🔗The policy report is available at: https://lnkd.in/e8grx3GA 🔗It is accompanied by a handbook of detailed guidance, examples, case studies and resources, available at: https://lnkd.in/ep8wzc9x #NYClimateWeek #ClimateActionNow #SustainableFinance #NetZeroTransition #ClimateLeadership #GovernmentPolicy #SystemicChange #SustainableDevelopment #TransitionPlanning #GFANZ #TPT #ESG #ClimateTransition #PublicPrivatePartnership #FutureOfFinance

  • View profile for Hans Stegeman
    Hans Stegeman Hans Stegeman is an Influencer

    Chief Economist, Triodos Bank | Columnist | PhD Transforming Economics for Sustainability

    74,379 followers

    🌍 Every year, William Ripple and colleagues publish their “State of the Climate” report. This year’s title: 𝐀 𝐏𝐥𝐚𝐧𝐞𝐭 𝐨𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐁𝐫𝐢𝐧𝐤.(👉https://lnkd.in/etQ9s-Ni) and titles evolve.... 🔴 2024: 𝐩𝐞𝐫𝐢𝐥𝐢𝐨𝐮𝐬 𝐭𝐢𝐦𝐞𝐬 ( 👉 https://lnkd.in/ep3HifyH). 🔴2023: 𝐞𝐧𝐭𝐞𝐫𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐮𝐧𝐜𝐡𝐚𝐫𝐭𝐞𝐝 𝐭𝐞𝐫𝐫𝐢𝐭𝐨𝐫𝐲 (👉https://lnkd.in/eGQ8CxpA Not a metaphor. Not alarmist. Just a brutally honest summary of where we are. 🔥 2024 was the hottest year ever recorded. 🌡️ Temperatures are now rising faster than expected. 🌊 Oceans are warming. Forests are burning. Ice is vanishing. 📈 And 22 out of 35 key planetary indicators are at record levels. The report doesn’t stop at listing symptoms. It diagnoses the cause: We’re in ecological overshoot. Our demands, for energy, food, growth, exceed what the Earth can sustainably provide. And while the climate breaks records, we’re still breaking ground on new fossil fuel projects. The authors don’t call for more pledges or slightly greener growth. They call for system change. 🌀 A fundamental shift in how we produce, consume, move, feed, and govern. They outline concrete actions: ✅ Ditch fossil fuel subsidies and accelerate the clean energy transition ✅ Protect and restore nature as a climate ally ✅ Shift to more plant-based diets and reduce food waste ✅ Address overconsumption, especially in wealthy economies ✅ Empower women, strengthen education, and stabilise population growth through rights-based approaches ✅ Most importantly: enable social tipping points, the changes that make other changes possible It’s a lot. But it’s also hopeful. Because systems can change, when enough of us push, question, challenge and choose differently. As citizens, professionals, voters, parents, investors: 🔍 What systems are you part of? 💡 What levers can you pull? This report is a call not just to act, but to act wisely, boldly, and together. 𝐈𝐭’𝐬 𝐧𝐨𝐭 𝐭𝐨𝐨 𝐥𝐚𝐭𝐞. 𝐁𝐮𝐭 𝐢𝐭 𝐢𝐬 𝐯𝐞𝐫𝐲 𝐥𝐚𝐭𝐞. (Figures 1-3 👇 in the report show the trends we urgently need to reverse.) 📄 Full report here: https://lnkd.in/etQ9s-Ni

  • View profile for Antonio Vizcaya Abdo

    Sustainability Leader | Governance, Strategy & ESG | Turning Sustainability Commitments into Business Value | TEDx Speaker | 125K+ LinkedIn Followers

    125,015 followers

    Green Procurement Playbook 2025 🌍 Procurement has become one of the most strategic functions shaping corporate sustainability and governance. The new Green Procurement Playbook 2025 by the World Economic Forum and Kearney presents a framework to integrate ESG principles into procurement and unlock business value through responsible supply chains. It highlights that procurement influences up to 90% of corporate emissions, positioning it as a critical lever for decarbonization, transparency, and systemic impact. The document introduces eight building blocks that guide organizations from compliance to leadership across strategy, operations, and enablers. They include executive alignment, governance structures, supplier engagement, collaboration, data systems, and capability building, all designed to embed sustainability into decision making. The playbook emphasizes that meaningful progress comes from governance and incentives that connect sustainability outcomes with corporate strategy. Examples from Iberdrola, Bayer, and DHL show how integrating sustainability into executive accountability and supplier collaboration drives measurable impact. Iberdrola ties executive compensation to sustainability results. Bayer established a global sustainable procurement structure. DHL invests significant resources in decarbonization based on clear business cases. These initiatives reflect how procurement can evolve from cost control to strategic value creation when ESG goals guide operational and financial decisions. The playbook also highlights the need for shared standards, data transparency, and cross sector alliances to accelerate transition and accountability across global supply chains. It reinforces the growing expectation for procurement teams to evaluate suppliers by price, quality, carbon performance, labor conditions, and governance practices. Green procurement has become a foundation for ESG integration, corporate resilience, and long term business performance. How are organizations embedding sustainability criteria into procurement governance frameworks today?

  • View profile for Gavin ❤️ McCormack
    Gavin ❤️ McCormack Gavin ❤️ McCormack is an Influencer

    Montessori Australia Ambassador, The Educator's Most Influential Educator 2021/22/23/24/25 - TEDX Speaker - 6-12 Montessori Teacher- Australian LinkedIn Top Voice - Author - Senior Lecturer - Film maker

    108,925 followers

    As the world evolves, our educational approach must also adapt, inspiring stewardship and understanding of global challenges. I’ve crafted curriculum outcomes that blend primary school subjects with real-world activities, fostering curiosity and a proactive mindset in young learners. 1. The study of rainforests - Let’s build a classroom mini-rainforest to explore biodiversity and promote ecosystem conservation. 2. The study of writing letters - Let’s impact future policies by writing persuasive letters to leaders about environmental or social issues. 3. The study of insects - Let’s create a habitat for beneficial insects to promote local biodiversity. 4. The study of history - What can we learn from historical events to improve community cohesion and peace? 5. The study of the food chain - Let’s adopt a local endangered species and start a campaign to protect it. 6. The study of maps - Let’s explore the impacts of climate change on different continents using interactive map projects. 7. The study of basic plants - Let’s cultivate a garden with plants from around the world, focusing on their roles in sustainable agriculture. 8. The study of local weather - Let’s build weather stations to understand climate patterns and their effects on our environment. 9. The study of simple machines - Let’s engineer solutions to improve water and energy efficiency in our community. 10. The study of counting and numbers - Let’s analyze data on recycling rates and set goals for waste reduction. 11. The study of community helpers - Let’s explore how people around the world help improve community well-being and resilience. 12. The study of basic materials - Let’s investigate how everyday materials can be recycled or reused creatively in art projects. 13. The study of stories and fables - Let’s share stories from various cultures that teach lessons about community and cooperation. 14. The study of water cycles - Let’s design experiments to clean water using natural filters, learning about sustainable living practices. 15. The study of world populations - Let’s look at population distribution and discuss how urban planning can address housing and sustainability challenges. 16. The study of ecosystems - Let’s restore a small section of a local park, linking it to the role ecosystems play in human well-being. 17. The study of cultural studies - Let’s hold a festival to celebrate global cultures and their approaches to sustainable living. 18. The study of physics - Let’s discover renewable energy sources through simple experiments. These projects encourage real-world application, teamwork, and problem-solving, emphasizing the role of education in shaping informed, proactive citizens ready to face global challenges. This approach makes learning relevant and essential for today’s interconnected world. Which one will you try? #education #school #teacher #teaching

  • View profile for Tullio Rossi, PhD

    Director @ Animate Your Science | Speaker | 🧬 Science Communication & AI Training | 👾 Science Animations | 🌌 Scientific Posters | 🏅 AMP Tomorrow Maker | 🏅 40 Under 40 |

    10,043 followers

    How do you get people to care about bugs they've never seen on an island they've never heard of? That was the challenge Dr. Adam Sharp faced when trying to protect the tiny endemic invertebrates of Ascension Island. Spoiler: We helped him crack it. And the outcome? Real protected areas established for these overlooked creatures 💥 Here's what made the difference: 1️⃣ The barrier was emotional, not informational.  People naturally gravitate toward charismatic megafauna like pandas and tigers. Millimetre-long invertebrates? Not so much. Photos weren't cutting through the bias. 2️⃣ Animation transformed perception.  We created a story that brought these creatures to life with personality and humour. The result wasn't just views, it was measurable public engagement that satisfied funding requirements and changed how locals saw these "bugs." 3️⃣ Creative communication drove conservation action.  The animation became an education tool in island schools, shifted community attitudes, and directly contributed to establishing new protected areas on Ascension Island. This is what happens when science meets storytelling. Real impact, not just awareness. Know a researcher or conservationist working on "unsexy" but important species? Share this with them. It might spark ideas 💡

  • View profile for Narendra Tiwari

    ESG | Fintech | Digital Transformation | Supply Chain Finance | Policy | Product | Risk Rating | Credit Underwriting |

    35,049 followers

    Building ESG: Five Steps to Shine in Sustainability Reporting ________________________________________ Sustainability reporting is no longer a niche pursuit, it's a strategic communication tool. But where do you begin? Here's a roadmap to craft a compelling sustainability report: 1. Set Priorities and Develop Strategy: Identify your most significant sustainability issues through a materiality assessment. This forms the foundation of your report, guiding content and showcasing your commitment to the most impactful areas. 2. Build the Structure and Gather Data: Choose a reporting framework that aligns with your industry and goals. Then, gather data from relevant departments to measure progress on your identified priorities. 3. Develop and Revise Content: Craft a clear and concise narrative that tells your sustainability story. Use data effectively, but remember human connection is key. Include visuals, employee testimonials, and future goals to engage your audience. 4. Finalize and Communicate: Ensure your report adheres to chosen frameworks and seek external assurance if needed. Promote your report through various channels to reach stakeholders and amplify your sustainability efforts. 5. Review Learnings and Iterate: Gather feedback and analyze the impact of your report. Use these insights to continuously improve your strategy and reporting practices for the next cycle. Ready to embark on your sustainability reporting journey? Image Credit: BSR Share your thoughts and experiences in the comments below! Please feel free to share (Disclaimer: Views are personal, should not be related to organisations view) #buildingEsg #circulareconomy #sustainablefinance #esgreporting #esgstrategy #esgrisk #climaterisk #climatechangeaction #climaterisks #india #emissions #esgratings #esg #cop28 #greenertogether #SDGs #sustainability #business #csr

  • View profile for Cristina Cruz

    Founder of Off U Go! | Sustainable Tourism Consultant | Empowering and Giving a Voice to Small Hospitality & Tourism Businesses and Regions to turn Heritage into Impact | Storytelling | Fractional FD

    6,629 followers

    Sustainability Storytelling That Actually Works (And makes people want to book with you.) You’ve stopped overusing the word “sustainability.” ✅ You’re speaking to feelings and values. ✅ So what next? 📌 It’s time to build your story bank: tiny, real moments that spark connection and show your impact without sounding corporate or preachy. Here’s what great sustainability storytelling looks like: 🍀 Micro moments, not manifestos “Each towel is stitched by a local women’s collective that’s revived a lost weaving tradition.” Small stories, big meaning. 🍀 People over process “Meet Rosa, our gardener, who turned the back lot into a flourishing food forest.” Names, faces, and pride matter more than policies. 🍀 Emotion before education “Guests often tell us: ‘This place made me feel grounded again.’” Make them feel, then explain why. 🍀 Use before-and-after frames “This was once a plastic strewn beach. Now it’s our sunset yoga spot, cleaned weekly with guests.” Transformation is captivating. You don’t need a big budget to tell stories that inspire change. You just need to start noticing the beauty behind what you already do, and share it. Want help crafting stories like these? I’d love to help. Let’s make sustainability something people feel proud to be part of.

  • View profile for Simit Bhagat

    Founder, Visual Storytelling Studio for Charities and Nonprofits | Founder, The Bidesia Project | UK Alumni Awards 2025 Finalist

    17,352 followers

    How can we use storytelling to support India’s Endangered Species? When you give an animal a name, a backstory, a song - you make it unforgettable. So how can we tell stories that don’t just inform, but protect? Let’s explore. Step 1 – Start with a character, not a cause Conservation begins with emotion. Before the science, help people feel the life behind the species. Take Collarwali, the legendary tigress of Pench Tiger Reserve. She raised 29 cubs, was known by name, and featured in Tiger: Spy in the Jungle. Her story became a living emblem of India’s Project Tiger and a symbol of motherhood and survival. Step 2 – Let communities lead the narrative When storytelling comes from within, it sticks. Culture becomes conservation. A powerful example: The Hargila Army in Assam. Led by Purnima Devi Barman, this women-led movement turned the once-reviled greater adjutant stork into a beloved icon - celebrated through sarees, songs, and community rituals. Step 3 – Use creative mediums to build connection Not everyone reads reports, but everyone responds to emotion. Look at The Photo Ark by Joel Sartore. With portraits of 16,000 species on black or white backgrounds, it makes the viewer focus on one thing: the face of a vanishing life. It’s science told through stillness - and it’s unforgettable. Step 4 – Celebrate what’s working Hope motivates more than guilt. Share recovery, not just risk. For instance, the revival of the one-horned rhino in Kaziranga. Once near extinction, their population surged thanks to patrols, community education, and strong will. Today, they are a success story and a symbol of resilience. Step 5 – Bridge science and emotion Facts need feeling to travel far. Make the research relatable and real. One great example is Wildlife Messengers, a documentary filmed by researchers in Peru. By handing the camera to scientists and communities, it turns data into something human. The result? A story that raised funds, awareness and empathy. Endangered species don’t just need conservation plans. They need stories. And when told with care and truth, those stories can help entire ecosystems survive. Read the full blog here: https://lnkd.in/dZR9y46e . . . . #visualstorytelling #wildlife #environment #creativeagency #simitbhagatstudios

  • View profile for Louis Diez

    Relationships, Powered by Intelligence 💡

    26,121 followers

    Your Impact Report is Probably Boring (And It's Costing You Donors) One approach puts donors to sleep. The other opens wallets. Which are you choosing? Effective storytelling in impact reports is key. Here's how to do it: Start with a Hook: Before: "We provided 10,000 meals last year." After: "Maria turned our food bank into a stepping stone for her family's future.” Use the "Before and After" Technique: Before: "Our job training program had a 75% success rate." After: "John went from homeless to homeowner in 18 months. Here's how our program made it possible..." Incorporate Sensory Details: Before: "We built a new playground." After: "Where there was once an empty lot, kids now laugh and play. The bright red slides and yellow swings have brought new life to the neighborhood. Parents chat on nearby benches, watching their children make new friends and create lasting memories.” Showcase Donor Impact: Before: "Your donations helped us achieve our goals." After: "Because of supporters like you, Sarah received the life-saving surgery she needed. Here's a letter from her family..." Use Data Visualization: Before: "We increased literacy rates by 40%." After: [Include an infographic showing a child's journey from struggling reader to honor roll student, with key stats along the way] End with a Clear Call-to-Action: Before: "Please consider donating." After: "For just $50, you can provide a month of tutoring for a child like Tommy." How to implement this: ☑️Identify your most compelling success stories ☑️ Gather quotes and personal anecdotes from beneficiaries ☑️Collect before-and-after photos or data points ☑️ Craft your narratives using the techniques above ☑️ Test different versions with a small group of donors ☑️ Refine based on feedback and roll out your new, story-driven impact report

Explore categories