Global Strategies

Campaign for a Sustainable Planet Campaign for a Sustainable Planet: Global Strategies

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See images of our global strategies work in China, where we're working to advance conservation.

Get Involved

There are many ways you can support our Campaign for a Sustainable Planet. You can make a gift today with our safe and secure donation form or explore how you can create a legacy for the natural world while meeting your philanthropic and financial goals.

Conservation requires action at individual sites around the world. But effective conservation is increasingly dependent on coordinated global strategies.

The Conservancy's Global Strategies Priority will help to:

  • Create a global network of protected areas and ensure that they are effectively managed;
  • Mobilize public funding for conservation;
  • Inspire the private sector to invest in sustainable use of resources;
  • Replicate successful conservation efforts regionally and globally; and
  • Fund leading-edge science to ensure we are getting the most out of our conservation investments.

Make a gift to our Campaign for a Sustainable Planet with our safe and secure donation form.

Parks and Protected Areas

Campaign Projects: Global Strategies

The Conservancy is working on the following global strategies:

  • Parks and Protected Areas for Life
  • Investing in Nature
  • Global Policy Actions
  • Leading with Science
  • Leveraging Conservation Knowledge
  • Forever Costa Rica
  • Advancing a National Conservation Agenda in China
  • Brazil's Working Landscapes
Leading with Science

Leading with Science

How can we accelerate innovative solutions to meet the world's conservation challenges? Learn more about how the Conservancy uses science as the foundation for its work.

Map

Map of Our Global Strategies Projects

See a map of our global strategies projects around the world.

Nature picture credits (top to bottom, left to right): Photos © Li Xueliang (Desert spring, Altun Mountain Reserve, China); © Anabela Garcia (Parks and Protected Areas); © Harley Soltes (Leading with Science)