Working with the support of the US Agency for International Development (USAID) in Madagascar, the Philippines and Cambodia along with local NGOs and partners, CI is helping rural communities understand the relationship between having smaller, healthier families and improving the stewardship of natural resources and protecting forests that are habitat for globally significant biodiversity.
Each country program has adopted an integrated conservation and health objective and has selected partners based on existing relations in the target communities and complementary skills to existing CI staff and activities.
CI-Philippines staff based in the northern Sierra Madre Biodiversity Corridor working with the NGO PROCESS Luzon and local government units to implement reproductive health and family planning campaigns among communities and local health workers. The program also works to improve natural resource and forest management practices.
In Madagascar, CI works with local NGOs, MATEZA and ASOS, in a partnership to deliver comprehensive health services (reproductive health, maternal and child health) in the biologically rich conservation corridor of Zahemena Mantadia in the eastern part of Madagascar. MATEZA is working in the north of the corridor near Fenerive and ASOS is working in the south near Brickaville. Each organization depends on field agents in these remote areas to deliver health services and educate farmers and their families about alternatives to tavy, or slash and burn agricultural practices. Mateza encourages farmers adopting alternative techniques to teach other farmers the skills they need, while ASOS helps communities set goals in health, environment, and conservation.
In Cambodia, CI partners with CARE Cambodia and Save Cambodia's Wildlife in the eastern Cardamoms to implement a holistic reproductive health and family planning outreach program coupled with IEC and livelihood activities about sustainable forest management and alternative use of non-timber forestry products. In addition, CI has engaged local stakeholders in community land use planning exercises to determine local conservation and development priorities.
The Selva Lacandona in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas has some of the highest levels of biological diversity in Mexico and the Mesoamerican biological corridor. This vast reserve of floral and faunal species is under increasing pressure from rapid population growth and unsustainable natural resource utilization patterns. With support from the David and Lucille Packard Foundation, CI has been working to implement an integrated health and conservation project in the Selva Lacandona, particularly the area surrounding the Montes Azules Biosphere Reserve.
Through the USAID Healthy Families, Healthy Forests grant, CI's Population-Environment program manages the Community Conservation Coalition (CCC). The CCC works to increase innovation, communication, collaboration and institutional change within international member organizations headquartered in DC to adopt approaches that integrate conservation with social development issues such as population, health, education and the economy. It sponsors presentations and seminars on emerging conservation topics such as impacts of human migration on conservation and the Champion Community approach in Madagascar.
The CCC also raises the awareness of conservation and development issues through: the production and dissemination of a CD of social science tools for conservation practioners: "Putting Conservation in Context: Social Science Tools for Conservation Practitioners"; the coordination of events at the World Conservation Congress 2004 concerning gender and conservation; and support of research into human migration.