2024 011 en
2024 011 en
2024 011 en
report 2023
Contents | Foreword | Message from the Chair | Mission and vision | 2023 by the numbers | Organisational structure | Advancing global biodiversity | Recognizing diverse governance |
Guiding the protection for biodiversity | Global framework | Marine conservation | Capacity for conservation | Positioning protection | Constituencies for nature | Conservation efforts | WCC Resolutions
| Sharing knowledge | WCPA publication statistics | Conservation heroes | Looking ahead | Acknowledgements | Appendix I | Appendix II
CONTENTS
Foreword 2
Message from the Chair 3
Mission and vision 4
2023 By the numbers 6
Organisational structure 8
Advancing global biodiversity
policy and action 10
Recognizing diverse governance and
management regimes for achieving
conservation outcomes 12
Guiding the protection of the right places
for biodiversity 14
Working towards a global framework for
assessing the effectiveness of protected
The designation of geographical entities in this publication, and the presentation of the and conservation areas 18
material, do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of IUCN or other
Advancing marine conservation:
participating organizations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, or area, or of its
authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Coasts to high seas 20
The views expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect those of IUCN or other Building capacity for conservation 22
participating organizations.
Positioning protection at the biodiversity
This publication has been made possible by support from the Bezos Earth Fund and Parks
Canada, and through contributions and editorial support from Jonathan Adams. WCPA and climate nexus 24
gratefully acknowledges support from the IUCN Commissions Support Unit, WCPA Publications
Expanding and supporting constituencies
Group, and the IUCN Publications Team. A complete list of organizational affiliations of WCPA
leaders are listed at the end of this report. for nature 26
Influencing conservation efforts around
Published by: IUCN, Gland, Switzerland
the world 28
Produced by: IUCN WCPA
Copyright: © 2024 IUCN, International Union for Conservation Delivering on WCC Resolutions 30
of Nature and Natural Resources
Building and sharing knowledge 31
Reproduction of this publication for educational or other
non-commercial purposes is authorised without prior written WCPA publication statistics 32
permission from the copyright holder provided the source is fully
acknowledged. Recognizing conservation heroes 34
Reproduction of this publication for resale or other commercial Looking ahead 36
purposes is prohibited without prior written permission of the
copyright holder. Acknowledgements and affiliations 38
Recommended citation: IUCN WCPA (2024). IUCN World Commission on Protected Areas Appendix I: List of publications 40
impact report 2023. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN
Appendix II: Summary of Resolutions
Cover photo(s): Front cover by Laura Smetsers. Wānaka, New Zealand activities 44
back cover by Nick Perez
© boris-smokrovic-unsplash
Layout and design by: Miller Design
Contents | Foreword | Message from the Chair | Mission and vision | 2023 by the numbers | Organisational structure | Advancing global biodiversity | Recognizing diverse governance | Contents | Foreword | Message from the Chair | Mission and vision | 2023 by the numbers | Organisational structure | Advancing global biodiversity | Recognizing diverse governance |
Guiding the protection for biodiversity | Global framework | Marine conservation | Capacity for conservation | Positioning protection | Constituencies for nature | Conservation efforts | WCC Resolutions Guiding the protection for biodiversity | Global framework | Marine conservation | Capacity for conservation | Positioning protection | Constituencies for nature | Conservation efforts | WCC Resolutions
| Sharing knowledge | WCPA publication statistics | Conservation heroes | Looking ahead | Acknowledgements | Appendix I | Appendix II | Sharing knowledge | WCPA publication statistics | Conservation heroes | Looking ahead | Acknowledgements | Appendix I | Appendix II
© aleksandar-bobic-unsplash
2 | WCPA impact report 2023 WCPA impact report 2023 | 3
Contents | Foreword | Message from the Chair | Mission and vision | 2023 by the numbers | Organisational structure | Advancing global biodiversity | Recognizing diverse governance | Contents | Foreword | Message from the Chair | Mission and vision | 2023 by the numbers | Organisational structure | Advancing global biodiversity | Recognizing diverse governance |
Guiding the protection for biodiversity | Global framework | Marine conservation | Capacity for conservation | Positioning protection | Constituencies for nature | Conservation efforts | WCC Resolutions Guiding the protection for biodiversity | Global framework | Marine conservation | Capacity for conservation | Positioning protection | Constituencies for nature | Conservation efforts | WCC Resolutions
| Sharing knowledge | WCPA publication statistics | Conservation heroes | Looking ahead | Acknowledgements | Appendix I | Appendix II | Sharing knowledge | WCPA publication statistics | Conservation heroes | Looking ahead | Acknowledgements | Appendix I | Appendix II
© Gregoire Dubois
© Gi0572 Getty
39
policy guidance, we are actively providing direction on a full suite of issues
surrounding protected and conserved landscapes and seascapes with the products released
highest conservation value and the greatest potential for impact.. new members
2
in 2023
Members by WCPA region (Updated 01.01.2024) issues of the
PARKS Journal peer-reviewed
scientific publications
2
19 papers
694 39
EUROPE NORTH from a total
EURASIA
of 70 authors
537
NORTH AMERICA
from 26
countries MOOCs developed
130 95
10
NORTH AFRICA, EAST ASIA
WEST ASIA
AND MIDDLE EAST
115
285
87 CARIBBEAN AND
CENTRAL AMERICA
128 WEST AND
CENTRAL
SOUTH ASIA
workshops New Task
AFRICA
98 and webinars Forces addressing
SOUTHEAST ASIA
organized recommendations
376
SOUTH AMERICA
176 EAST AND in 11 IUCN
SOUTHERN AFRICA
resolutions
271
OCEANIA
Membership demographics
WCPA member age categories
100,000
WCPA Leadership gender
MALE FEMALE
49.3% 50.7%
7
WCPA supported
the execution of
major global events
and hosted
15
side events WCPA publications
at policy events were downloaded over
18-35 36-50 51-65 65+ around the world 100,000 times in 2023
16.26 % 39.95 % 31.04 % 12.76 %
6 | WCPA impact report 2023 WCPA impact report 2023 | 7
Contents | Foreword | Message from the Chair | Mission and vision | 2023 by the numbers | Organisational structure | Advancing global biodiversity | Recognizing diverse governance | Contents | Foreword | Message from the Chair | Mission and vision | 2023 by the numbers | Organisational structure | Advancing global biodiversity | Recognizing diverse governance |
Guiding the protection for biodiversity | Global framework | Marine conservation | Capacity for conservation | Positioning protection | Constituencies for nature | Conservation efforts | WCC Resolutions Guiding the protection for biodiversity | Global framework | Marine conservation | Capacity for conservation | Positioning protection | Constituencies for nature | Conservation efforts | WCC Resolutions
| Sharing knowledge | WCPA publication statistics | Conservation heroes | Looking ahead | Acknowledgements | Appendix I | Appendix II | Sharing knowledge | WCPA publication statistics | Conservation heroes | Looking ahead | Acknowledgements | Appendix I | Appendix II
Commissions Administrator
Steering committee Executive Officer Nishamini Amunugama
Erinn Drage
Programme Finance Manager
Programme Officer Nestor Soler Del Toro
Mitali Sharma
Themes Regions Communications Coordinator
Vivian Ejezie
Finance Officer
Augusta Almeida Ferri
Capacity Governance, Equity Caribbean & North Eurasia Commissions Finance Administrator
Mike Appleton and Rights Central America Tatjana Rosen Monitoring and Evaluations Donall McLoughlin
Helen Tugendhat Allan Valverde Arlyne Johnson
Marine South East Asia *The Commissions Support Unit is comprised of IUCN Secretariat
Felipe Paredes Biodiversity Science East & Southern Africa Amran Hamzah Staff that support the operations of the Commission
Communications Officer
Stephen Woodley Harriet Davies Mostert Pablo López Guijosa
People & Parks West & Central Africa
Karen Keenleyside Scaling Natural East Asia Florence Palla WCPA Advisors
Solutions Yoshitaka Kumagai Kent Redford, Penny Figgis, Dan Laffoley, Publications
Conservation Outcomes Brent Mitchell South America Kathleen Fitzgerald, Marc Hockings
Nick Salafsky & Paola Europe Paula Bueno
Mejia Cortez Young Professionals Erika Vaida-Bela Publications Group
Erinn Drage South Asia Co-Chairs: Sue Stolton and Nigel Dudley.
World Heritage North Africa, Sonali Ghosh Malcolm Hunter, Kent Redford, Ivy Farheen
Cyril Kormos West Asia, Middle East Hussain, Erinn Drage, Paulina Karimova
Nizar Hani Oceania
Lou Sanson PARKS Journal
North America Marc Hockings
Mariana Bellot Rojas
8 | WCPA impact report 2023 WCPA impact report 2023 | 9
Contents | Foreword | Message from the Chair | Mission and vision | 2023 by the numbers | Organisational structure | Advancing global biodiversity | Recognizing diverse governance | Contents | Foreword | Message from the Chair | Mission and vision | 2023 by the numbers | Organisational structure | Advancing global biodiversity | Recognizing diverse governance |
Guiding the protection for biodiversity | Global framework | Marine conservation | Capacity for conservation | Positioning protection | Constituencies for nature | Conservation efforts | WCC Resolutions Guiding the protection for biodiversity | Global framework | Marine conservation | Capacity for conservation | Positioning protection | Constituencies for nature | Conservation efforts | WCC Resolutions
| Sharing knowledge | WCPA publication statistics | Conservation heroes | Looking ahead | Acknowledgements | Appendix I | Appendix II | Sharing knowledge | WCPA publication statistics | Conservation heroes | Looking ahead | Acknowledgements | Appendix I | Appendix II
Over the past years, WCPA and its partners have developed detailed technical guidance on
ADVANCING GLOBAL many aspects relevant to the target, including rights-based approaches, inland water
protection, privately protected areas, connectivity, and areas of particular importance to
BIODIVERSITY POLICY biodiversity. Notably, WCPA, World Wildlife Fund US (WWF-US) and the Global Environment
30
Facility (GEF) produced a comprehensive Target 3 Guide that explains how to plan and
AND ACTION implement the target, delves into each of the target’s elements, and explores overarching
concepts that should guide implementation. The Guide also provides links to resources for
multi-stakeholder/multi-rightsholder approaches, and discusses options for developing and
implementing effective monitoring plans.
x
In December 2022, more than 190 countries sealed a
WCPA, along with The Nature Conservancy and the High Ambition Coalition for Nature and
landmark environmental agreement, the Kunming-Montreal
People, developed a detailed, online 30x30 Solutions toolkit, a curated web-resource
Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF), which calls upon
30
providing guidance and information to support implementation of Target 3. Connectivity is an
governments to take urgent action to halt and reverse
essential element of Target 3. WCPA’S Connectivity Specialist Group (SG) has developed an
biodiversity loss by 2030. WCPA is committed to supporting
overview of opportunities for connectivity conservation in the GBF and alignment with
governments, NGOs, Indigenous peoples, local communities,
financing as well as guidance for addressing connectivity in revised National Biodiversity and
and other stakeholders in achieving the ambitious and crucial
Strategic Action Plans (NBSAPs) and implementation of the GBF. SG members are also
goals of the agreement.
holding workshops to refine application of the IUCN Guidelines for conserving connectivity
Protected and conserved areas (PCAs) will play a key role in through ecological networks and corridors, addressing ecological connectivity in the
the GBF. Currently, only 17 percent of terrestrial areas and development of roads, railways, and canals, and co-created the animated short film “Animals
8 percent of marine areas are protected, and many of these
areas are managed ineffectively or in ways that do not embody
WCPA is move to survive: Wildlife Connect Initiative.”
equity and human rights, or are not situated well enough to a global Many governments, organisations, and donors are mobilising to support implementation of
30x30. WCPA has sought to share knowledge and learning among these actors, and to bring
achieve lasting and effective biodiversity conservation. As a
global leader on protected and conserved areas, WCPA is leader in the rigour to the pursuit of the Target 3 ambition, so that by 2030 all stakeholders can be
confident that the spirit and not just the letter of the agreement has been fulfilled. An
working closely with parties to the Convention on Biological
Diversity, of which the GBF is a key part. collective important part of that process is helping governments build better understanding of how to
govern their protected areas and how to honour their commitments to equitable, rights-based
Target 3: Bending the curve effort to approaches to humanity’s shared goals to protect the nature that sustains us. WCPA has
Nature is in a steep decline, both in species and plenitude. protect 30% been active in facilitating discussion on these essential topics over the past year.
The conservation community needs to know whether all its efforts and investments are truly
WCPA recognizes the significance of all 23 of the GBF’s
ambitious targets, as each is important if we are to reverse this
of land and reversing the curve. A key aspect of WCPA’s work in 2023 was forging alliances and partnerships
trend and restore nature to abundance. Global attention and waters by that position the Commission to provide technical support and guidance to the T3 Partnership,
the Secretariat of the CBD, and the High Ambition Coalition for Nature and People.
resources, however, are particularly focused on Target 3, the
best-known of the targets, often called the push for “30x30.” 2030 While concentrating on Target 3, WCPA has also been building capacity regarding the other
Target 3 aims for effective and equitable protection and two area-based conservation targets of the GBF: spatial planning (Target 1); and restoration
conservation of at least 30 percent of the planet by 2030. Its (Target 2). The new Task Force on Restoration aims to strengthen knowledge and develop
success or failure will be a barometer of whether multilateralism guidance to improve restoration implementation in the framework of the GBF targets and will
can be effective in addressing the decline of species and the carry out research, provide evidence-based technical tools, and policy documents to support
wealth of nature. improved integration of restoration in the context of protected and conserved areas.
WCPA’s Spatial Planning Task Force is working to ensure that biodiversity considerations are
considered through a typical process of analysing and allocating the spatial and temporal
distribution of human activities in areas to achieve ecological, economic, and social objectives.
Such biodiversity-inclusive spatial planning is not well defined by the GBF, and the Task Force
is helping to address this gap and provide guidance on how Parties to the CBD can meet
their commitments toward biodiversity-inclusive spatial planning in ways that lead to real
benefits for biodiversity are equitable, inclusive, representative, realistic, and feasible with
limited time and resources.
Target 3 calls for terrestrial, inland water, and marine areas to be “effectively
conserved and managed through ecologically representative, well-connected, and
© tony-reid-unsplash
Few governments recognize privately protected and conserved areas when reporting their
progress on the 30x30 target. WCPA’s Privately Protected Areas & Nature Stewardship
Specialist Group improves understanding and recognition of the role of private approaches to
nature conservation, and helps enhance the effectiveness of privately protected and conserved
areas by gathering information and sharing it at the global level. Governance, equity, and rights protected and conserved area management. In 2023, under
the WCPA Theme, a joint working group was established
Governance of protected and conserved areas is now between CEESP and WCPA to explore and reduce barriers
clearly understood as a main element in the legal, policy, to expanding governance by Indigenous peoples and local
institutional, and practical framework of conservation around communities in PCAs to further diversify governance and
the world. Governance that advances equity, human rights, management regimes, and to develop guidance and tools to
and approaches that elevate shared governance practices support improved recognition of their roles and contributions.
are needed to navigate the growing complexities of PCA
management. The GBF has begun to move the needle in
terms of recognizing the critical importance of rights-based New Best Practice Guidelines
approaches to PCA governance across all governance types, Forthcoming Box 3
yet these concepts and their application remain a challenge
for many countries and agencies. The forthcoming WCPA Protected Areas Best Practice
Guidelines, Recognising and Respecting the Territories
WCPA has a unique leadership role in providing guidance
and Areas Conserved by Indigenous Peoples and
related to the governance of protected and conserved areas.
Local Communities (ICCAs) Overlapped by Protected
WCPA fosters, coordinates, and actively engages in a set of
Areas, identifies six key approaches and 20 good
initiatives to bring governance practices that reflect equity
practices through which overlapped ICCAs can be
and human rights to the centre of protected and conserved
area management discourse, and develops concrete recognised and respected. Much of the guidance will
recommendations for practice. Working closely with key allies, also apply to recognising and respecting ICCAs
© ives-ives-unsplash
including the Commision on Environmental, Economic, and overlapped by OECMs governed by governments and
Social Policy (CEESP), the WCPA Theme and Specialist Group private entities that do not represent or include
on Governance, Equity, and Rights elevates this dialogue indigenous peoples and local communities.
and provides practical tools that enable countries, agencies,
and their counterparts to integrate such practices into
© john-lee -unsplash
be a key tool for guiding decisions on conservation and sustainable management. WCPA
supports the KBA Partnership, which seeks to enhance global conservation efforts by
systematically mapping internationally important sites and ensuring that scarce resources
are directed to the most important places for nature. Figure 1: Six broad principles
that can guide planning
WCPA also recognises the need to pay attention to realms and ecosystems that are and ensure protected and
under-represented in the current protected area estate such as freshwater and mountain conserved areas are well sited,
as in Watson et al. 2023.
ecosystems.
Freshwater Mountains
The WCPA Freshwater Specialist Group addresses urgent Members of WCPA’s Mountains Specialist Group have
issues related to conservation of freshwater/inland water developed a strategic decision-support tool for identifying and
habitats within protected areas. Group members conduct prioritising which candidate mountain areas most urgently
research, conservation activities, and outreach to help ensure require protection.1 The six-step algorithm harnesses multiple
that the complete diversity of the world’s freshwater datasets including mountain Key Biodiversity Areas, World
Make ‘areas of particular ecosystems are adequately represented in the global network Terrestrial Ecosystems, Biodiversity Hotspots, and Red
importance for diversity’
the primary focus of
PCA establishment
1 Be clear around the
reasons for conserving
ecosystem services
4 of protected areas and OECMs. Working closely with the
Ramsar Secretariat, the Freshwater Specialist Group is
focused on the development of guidance that supports Target
List species and ecosystems. The algorithm makes use of
other key attributes including opportunities for disaster risk
reduction, climate change adaptation, developing mountain
3 in freshwater settings, particularly working to better define tourism, maintaining elevational gradients and natural
OECMs in freshwater environments. ecological corridors, and conserving flagship species. This
rapid-assessment tool enables regional teams with sufficient
Group members participated in development and implementation
local knowledge and country-specific values to finalise lists
of the Freshwater Challenge. This country-led initiative aims to
Well sited substantiate, integrate, and accelerate targeted interventions
of priority mountain areas for protection and ensures a
repeatable, unbiased, and scientifically credible method for
Protected and for rivers and wetlands, connecting
Transparently deal
with representation 2 Conserved
Utilise spatial planning
principles and tools 5 these with national plans and
strategies. It will increase the
allocating resources and priorities to safeguard the world’s
most biodiverse mountain areas facing myriad threats.
overall investment into the
Areas restoration and conservation of
1 Jacobs, P., Carbutt, C., Beever, E.A., Foggin, J.M., Martin, M., Orchard, S.
and Sayre, R. (2023). A Decision-Support Tool to Augment Global Mountain
freshwater ecosystems and Protection and Conservation, including a Case Study from Western Himalaya.
Land 12: 1323.
substantially increase the social
and economic returns on those
investments, including the goal
of restoring 300,000 km of
Plan for ecological
connectivity 3 Ensure planning is
equitable and inclusive 6 rivers and 350 million hectares
of wetlands by 2030.
Over
1/3
of all shark species
Convention, and provides IUCN’s Heritage and Culture Team with the technical
expertise and knowledge of WCPA experts. WCPA coordinates with the World
Heritage Committee, the UNESCO World Heritage Centre, and the other Advisory
476.8
across the world’s oceans.
As with IMMAs, there is no legal or regulatory mandate The World Heritage List now covers
associated with ISRAs. One of main goals of ISRAs is to 266 natural and mixed sites encompassing
million hectares
attract the attention of policy- and decision-makers who
design and develop MPAs to the need of maintaining the
favourable conservation status of sharks in those specific
areas. WCPA members have helped design criteria to
capture important aspects of shark biology and ecology
and to encompass multiple aspects of species vulnerability,
distribution, abundance, and key life cycle activities, as
well as areas of high diversity and endemicity. With the
finalisation of the ISRA Criteria, IUCN is moving forward to
assess a region against these criteria and identify the first
ISRAs in the world.
© Atamyrad Veyisov
to develop a scientific process toward that end, drawing
delineated and managed for
© Gregoire Dubois
MANAGEMENT PROCESS
1.Good governance
3a. Adaptive strategy 4a. Threats 4b. Area values 4c. Human wellbeing
2. Sound design implementation reduced conserved enhanced
ADVANCING MARINE
CONSERVATION: COASTS High seas Marine Protected Area
TO THE HIGH SEAS In September 2023, the United Nations officially adopted Effectiveness
a new international agreement on the conservation and
WCPA members are helping develop the tools necessary to
WCPA seeks to inspire, inform, and enable people to protect Planet sustainable use of marine biodiversity beyond national
assess the effectiveness of MPAs and marine OECMs and
Ocean by promoting the establishment of a global, representative jurisdiction (called the BBNJ Agreement). Within just a
organised sessions at the International Marine Protected
system of effectively managed and lasting networks of marine few months, 86 countries signed the treaty and one has
Areas Congress on this topic. WCPA Marine experts also
protected areas (MPAs) and OECMs within National Economic become a formal Party.
launched two climate change resilience assessment tools
Exclusion Zone areas as well as in the High Seas and Areas Beyond
WCPA members have been deeply engaged in the for MPAs – one with the WCPA Climate Change Specialist
National Jurisdictions. The Marine Thematic Group, which includes the
decades-long process to conclude this agreement, which group, one with the EU Ocean Governance project –
Marine Mammal Protected Areas Task Force, the High Seas Specialist
marks a watershed moment in the global commitment to as part of more general WCPA marine protected area
Group, as well as working groups dedicated to other marine issues
safeguarding the health and vitality of the world’s oceans. management effectiveness activities.
such as connectivity, management effectiveness, spatial planning, and
Members of the High Seas Specialist Group are now
climate change, is providing guidance on key elements relevant to the
working on how to quickly implement the agreement, to
global MPA agenda through assuring quality information, celebrating
foster high seas MPAs, and to help envision sustainable
achievements, identifying priorities, and spurring action in order to help
futures for the high seas.
governments, agencies, organisations, and individuals plan, develop,
and implement MPAs.
WCPA and the UN Ocean Decade
white papers
2024 is the fourth year of implementation of the UN Decade
of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (2021-2030).
The Vision 2030 process of the UN Ocean Decade aims
to identify common measures of success for each of the
Antarctic and Southern Oceans 10 Ocean Decade Challenges on the road to 2030. A key
outcome of this strategic ambition setting process is a set
WCPA reviewed and updated the strategy for IUCN’s of White Papers that will outline a comprehensive approach
Programme and Policy on Antarctica Issues (especially to user needs, priority datasets, and gaps in science, and
taking into consideration relevant IUCN resolutions, recent outline the strategic measures required to fulfil the objectives
policy developments including the GBF and IUCN’s of each Challenge by the end of the Ocean Decade. WCPA
Programme of Work) for action now and that can act as an is working to influence the White Paper on Challenge 2:
input to the 2025-2029 intersessional Programme; and Protect and Restore Ecosystems and Biodiversity.
developed a plan that outlines a sustainable means on
implementation including options for fundraising and
capacity development, aiming to elevate IUCN’s
engagement with and influence of relevant policy fora.
Antarctic tourism
Tourism in Antarctica has grown enormously, expanding
ten-fold between 1992 and 2020. While Antarctic tourism
can foster public support and investment for the continent’s
protection, tourist activities can also cause damage at
visitor sites and along travel routes and disturb wildlife.
Antarctic travel also has a high carbon footprint. IUCN Resolution 107
All activities in Antarctica are regulated through the
reducing the impact
Antarctic Treaty System. WCPA members have been active of fisheries on marine
participants in the annual Antarctic Treaty Consultative biodiversity
Meetings, which constitute the most important decision-
making forum for Antarctica. WCPA also supported Working together with the IUCN Secretariat,
the revision of the IUCN strategy for Antarctica and the Ocean team, and the Programme and Policy
Southern Ocean. IUCN WCPA Antarctic tourism experts Committee, WCPA actively supported the creation
recommend more research to inform the policies and of the task force for Resolution 107 which aims
implementation of a science-based tourism management to advance the reconciliation of fisheries and
conservation, and reduce the impact of fisheries
© ishan-unsplash
approach, along with improved safeguards and monitoring
to help enhance the positive impacts of tourism as a on marine biodiversity.
conservation tool.
BUILDING CAPACITY FOR emphasis on workforce issues. A landmark meeting in Sustainable financing
Brussels in September 2023, attended by WCPA members,
Area-based conservation has historically been under-
CONSERVATION orientated the European Commission and major conservation
donors about the new framework. resourced, often overly reliant on a single income source
such as donor-funding or government budgets. Realising
WCPA and the other URSA partners are making good and maintaining the environmental, social, and economic
The term capacity building is often equated with training, but it has a progress in operationalising the 30x30 Framework around benefits of PCAs and OECMs requires long-term adequate
much broader meaning; a simple definition is “the means to plan and the world. For example, the International Ranger Federation financing that leverages diverse finance tools to achieve
achieve.” This includes not just the skills and knowledge provided by Ranger Code of Conduct is being widely adopted, including desired biodiversity outcomes and management objectives.
training, but also the ability of an organisation to meet its targets. in South Sudan, Bhutan (where 1,400 rangers have been
Central to organisational capacity is the workforce, which has recently trained to use it), and India, where it has been integrated into WCPA’s Sustainable Finance Specialist Group supports
been the focus of the WCPA Capacity Thematic Group. the curricula of 28 ranger training colleges. There is a plan to the development of new, innovative, and resilient sources
incorporate the Ranger Competencies into national training of finance that are critical if PCAs and Indigenous and
While identifying where new PCAs need to be is critical to reaching the Traditional Territories are to reach their full potential and
curricula in Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan. The
30x30 target, it will also be vital to ensure that these areas have the deliver cross-cutting benefits to people and the planet. The
competencies are also being used to train new Indigenous-
workforce necessary to manage them effectively and fairly. Focusing on Specialist Group seeks to develop and share knowledge,
led ranger teams in Sulawesi, Indonesia. URSA members are
the area and not the workforce is like building a new hospital without build awareness and capacity, and promote innovation
discussing with international insurance companies a global
considering the need for doctors, nurses, ancillary workers, and in sustainable finance solutions through a strategic and
scheme to provide life insurance for all rangers. WCPA is also
administrators to staff it. Indeed, an article published in 2023 by WCPA collaborative approach to identify, share, and pioneer finance
preparing a new Best Practice Guide on Ranger Community
members refers to rangers as “essential planetary health workers” who solutions. The Sustainable Finance Specialist Group is also
Relations.
are responsible for managing large tracts of the planet’s lands and currently developing Good Practice Guidelines publication on
waters yet are often underutilised, underrecognized, and In December, 2023, 168 participants from 21 countries Protected Areas Finance.
underequipped. attended the first Asian Ranger Forum. More than 61 percent
of participants were active rangers, 23 percent of participants
A recent study by WCPA members, drawing on data from 176 countries
were women—including one of the first women from Saudi
and territories, showed that the PCA workforce is a third of what it
needs to be; doubling the area under conservation will require a
Arabia to work as a ranger—and 31 percent identified as Sustainable tourism in protected
Indigenous people. The forum addressed different aspects of
workforce six times bigger than it is today: around 3 million people,
ranger work ranging from marine rangers, indigenous rangers, areas
including 1.5 million rangers. These staff also need to be equipped,
community trust, human rights, and many more. The outputs Another important element of effective protected area
trained, deployed, and supported to ensure that they do their work
from this event will feed into the World Ranger Congress management is building the capacity to regulate travel
effectively, ethically, and equitably.
Declaration in 2024, and in turn to a major programme of and tourism in ways that contribute significantly to local
As a founding member of the Universal Ranger Support Alliance activities on PCA workforce issues planned for the 2025 IUCN economies and local conservation efforts while ensuring
(URSA), WCPA is highlighting the workforce challenges associated with World Conservation Congress. positive outcomes for nature. WCPA’s Tourism and Protected
30x30. The ‘Rangers for 30x30 Framework’ (Figure 4) defines four Areas Specialist Group supports the oversight of sustainable
The Forum also hosted elections for the Ranger Federation
essential elements of capacity for managing 30 percent of the planet. tourism in protected area systems and helps develop
of Asia with its newly elected president, Mr. Bunthy Tao,
an indigenous representative from one of India’s largest innovative approaches that recognise the fundamental role of
Publications based on this framework include a global code of conduct,
nature in the travel and tourism industry.
© Unsplash
an international labour standard for working conditions, and a set of indigenous tribes.
competencies required of all rangers. WCPA and its partners are asking
© Kateryna Hankina
Conduct Workforce Competences
Responsibility Professionalisation Knowledge
Accountability Adequate numbers Skills
Leadership Formal recognition Attitude
Rights-based approaches Established standards Training and learning
POSITIONING
PROTECTION AT THE
© Gregoire Dubois
BIODIVERSITY AND
CLIMATE NEXUS
Climate change and biodiversity loss are two of the most
important challenges and risks for human societies.
Protected and conserved areas will be critical to solving WCPA collaborated with the IUCN Climate Crisis Commission case studies from Africa, Asia, Latin America, Europe, North
these inseparable and interdependent crises, which on the production of a technical brief, Connecting the Dots: America, and Australia in which climate change mitigation had
requires coherent, consistent, and integrated efforts on the Achieving synergistic action for global biodiversity and climate been incorporated into management of protected areas. The
part of governments at all levels, multilateral and bilateral goals utilising the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity workshops explored topics such as improving ecosystems
institutions, communities, businesses, scientists, and others Framework, to support COP28 decisions on protected services in the context of climate change mitigation, and
to limit global warming to ensure a habitable climate and areas and climate change. WCPA prepared two other briefs technologies to overlay carbon maps with other map layers
protect biodiversity. Only by considering climate and biodiversity – Role of PAs in climate change mitigation and biodiversity such as biodiversity and connectivity to determine priority
as parts of the same complex problem can we develop conservation, and Primary Forests, Ecosystem Integrity areas for protection.
solutions that maximise benefits while minimising risk. and Climate Change – to focus attention at COP28 on the
WCPA continues to lobby for the integration of primary forests,
importance of PCAs in the climate-biodiversity nexus.
Safeguarding biodiversity and ecosystems is fundamental ecosystem integrity, and the climate biodiversity nexus into
to climate-resilient development. That in turn depends on WCPA, along with the Climate Crisis Commission, the both CBD and UNFCCC. At CBD COP15, WCPA sought to
the effective and equitable conservation embodied in the Climate Action Network’s Ecosystems Working Group, and incorporate these issues into Target 8 of the GBF and while
30x30 target. PCAs are the most effective tools to address World Wildlife Fund, achieved important firsts for nature in that effort is ongoing WCPA remains committed to highlighting
biodiversity loss and climate change with the required the COP28 decision on the Global Stocktake. These include their importance in multilateral environmental agreements.
urgency and WCPA is working on a number of fronts to recognition of the importance of:
highlight the role of PCAs. WCPA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
• Protecting and restoring nature for achieving the Goals of Administration's MPA Center co-published a new Climate
WCPA supported the development of the IUCN Inter- the Paris Agreement; Change Resilience and Adaptation Planning Tool (CC-RAPT) for
Commission Task Force on Biodiversity and Climate to • Increasing efforts to halt and reverse deforestation and MPAs and Marine OECMs. CC-RAPT helps MPA programmes
promote greater and more visible positioning of IUCN in the forest degradation in all countries by 2030; improve their management and governance in relation to climate
biodiversity-climate space, building on the ongoing work of the change impacts on marine biodiversity and the cultural, social,
• Protecting and restoring carbon reservoirs (stocks) as well
Commissions, and highlighting existing knowledge products and economic benefits that marine biodiversity provides. Many
as sinks and the role of biodiversity;
and guidance. As part of this effort, WCPA led the
• Aligning climate action in forests and ecosystems with the of the existing management effectiveness tools and
development of a statement by the chairs of all seven IUCN
GBF; assessments that MPAs currently use address climate change
Commissions on the importance of integrating solutions to
directly or indirectly by fostering management best practices
the biodiversity and climate crises, the first time that all • Preserving and restoring oceans and coastal ecosystems
© cris-tagupa-unsplash
#NatureForAll Health Box 5 Wilderness and The World At Night Box 6 WCPA Young Professionals Network Box 7
The long-term success of WCPA’s mission will require Ecosystem health, human health and well-being, and Wilderness has its own protected area category under The IUCN WCPA Young Professionals (YP) Network
expanding global constituencies for conservation. Yet, the climate change are inextricably interconnected. Target IUCN’s classification system, Category Ib. The primary brings together WCPA members under the age of 35.
connection to nature is fraying or has been lost across 12 of the Global Biodiversity Framework calls on goal of wilderness areas is “to protect the long-term The YP Network supports YP engagement within
many diverse cultures. Rebuilding that connection and Parties to the CBD to “Increase the area of, access to, ecological integrity of natural areas that are undisturbed broader Commission activities and encourages their
encouraging more people in all regions and contexts to and benefits from green and blue spaces, for human by significant human activity, free of modern integration into WCPA’s Specialist Groups, Task
support conservation is a vital but under-appreciated health and well-being in urban areas and other densely infrastructure and where natural forces and processes Forces, Themes, and Regions. The network also works
aspect of a comprehensive response to the biodiversity and populated areas.” predominate, so that current and future generations to facilitate and promote intergenerational collaboration
climate crises. have the opportunity to experience such areas.” and knowledge exchange between established and
Recognising the urgency of this task, WCPA, IUCN’s WCPA’s Health and Well-being Specialist Group emerging protected area leaders and professionals.
Commission on Education and Communication, Parks facilitates partnerships to influence policies and plans Many people value wilderness for its associations with
Canada, and several other international partners (many of across sectors, builds and communicates the evidence wild nature and physical space, because of its One of the YP Network’s most exciting activities in
them park agencies) founded #NatureForAll in 2016. Today, on benefits of nature for human health and well-being, aesthetic and spiritual values, because of its cultural 2023 was the execution of another successful
with core support from the two Commissions, the Alana and encourages the development of standard metrics significance, and because they increasingly #NatureForAll Youth Oasis, this time with a marine
Institute, the Children and Nature Network, Parks Canada, to measure the co-benefits. understand that wilderness areas provide vital twist as the Youth Archipelago at IMPAC5. The YP
and the Sustainable Forestry Initiative, #NatureForAll is a ecosystem services. Yet not even these remote areas Network also worked alongside IUCN CEC to develop
Connecting with nature is a potential public health
thriving community of over 600 partner organisations are immune to the effects of technology, among the
strategy that is accessible and affordable for many a best practice guide for facilitating youth spaces and
sharing knowledge, strategies, and actions to connect most pervasive and widespread of which is light.
populations, with research demonstrating not only making space for young voices at international events.
people with nature and build constituency for conservation.
protective values but restorative benefits as well.
2023 was a busy and impactful year. In February 2023, Personal experiences and connections with nature Light pollution not only mars the wilderness experience The YP Network has made targeted efforts to expand
#NatureForAll hosted its first ever Love Fest, a two-week- provide powerful benefits for individual and societal and landscape beauty, it disturbs ecological and its membership in countries and regions with less
long celebration of love and action for nature. This online health, well-being, and resilience. commemorative integrity, interferes with astronomy, representation of young people within the
global event shared inspiring stories, featured 50 live degrades the appreciation of mythologies and cultural Commission. It also continues to support the
interviews with WCPA leaders and other conservationists, practices related to the night sky, carries risks to professional development of young people passionate
and showcased 18 partner events. The #NatureForAll Love human health, and wastes energy. IUCN, WCPA’s about protected and conserved areas, including
Fest is now an annual event for sharing our conservation Urban Conservation Strategies Specialist Group, the facilitating placements within Specialist Groups and
stories with a broad and diverse audience. United States Park Service, and other partners Task Forces across the Commission. The Network is
Youth engagement was again an important area of focus in analysed the impacts of light pollution, the resources currently rethinking its governance, structure, and
2023. During the Fifth International Marine Protected Areas available to help combat it, and the best practices for strategy, and looks forward to continuing to build on
Congress (IMPAC5), #NatureForAll partners hosted a youth reducing it and compiled The world at night, a guide to an even stronger foundation in 2024.
pavilion (#NatureForAll Youth Archipelago), offering youth light pollution solutions, public engagement, and
attendees a place to gather, have their voices heard, and community outreach. The report is intended to bring
highlight youth efforts in ocean conservation. Lessons from night sky values and protection methods to protected
areas and nature conservation throughout the world.
this and previous #NatureForAll youth pavilions were Cultural and Spiritual Values of
consolidated in a guide to creating youth dialogue spaces
at major events that will be published in 2024. Protected Areas
Through webinars, blogs, short videos, and social media WCPA’s Specialist Group on Cultural and Spiritual Values
content, #NatureForAll continued to highlight the vital of Protected Areas has developed Best Practice Guidelines
importance of protected and conserved areas as places to on the Cultural and Spiritual Significance of Nature in the
experience, learn about, and conserve nature. It expanded Management and Governance of Protected and Conserved
its website and brought focus to the important work done Areas. In 2023 the group focused on spreading the word
by staff of protected area agencies. In addition, the Sounds about and implementing those guidelines. Specialist Group
of Your Park initiative, which offers an immersive experience members conducted training workshops in Italy, the
of sounds from protected areas, continued to grow; it now Netherlands, Spain, and India, as well as global webinars.
© juanma-clemente-alloza-unsplash
hosts 168 recordings from 21 countries. The guidelines were translated into Spanish and workshops
will be held in Peru in 2024.
28
35 33
38 41 30
25
32
24 20 19 29 27 26
36
IMPAC5 Vancouver,
Canada 40 37
From 3-9 February, WCPA
co-convened the International 31
Marine Protected Areas 34 43 42
Congress (IMPAC5), bringing
together more than X marine 12
39 44 13
conservation experts from
around the world.
23 9
21
15
11 8
22
16
10
6 7
INFLUENCING CONSERVATION 2 1
5
18
17
Working across its 12 geographic regions and associated Regional 3
4
Vice chairs, WCPA engaged in extensive policy advocacy, outreach, Asian Ranger Forum 45
and capacity development that reached all seven continents. Guwahati, India
From 5-8 December,
Our regional and thematic leaders, and members played pivotal WCPA helped convene
the Asian Ranger Forum 46
roles in advancing the Global Biodiversity Framework, advocated which brought together
47
for effective protected and conserved areas in local, national, and 168 participants from 21
countries, most of whom
international forums, and provided science-based expertise and are active rangers.
guidance on nature conservation.
Through strategic and targeted events, WCPA contributed to shaping
the policies and commitments of governments and key decision- 48
makers across the globe.
1. Rwanda COMIFAC Regional 8. Philippines Workshop on the 14. Singapore Insuring the Ranger 21. Mexico Virtual Panel of Experts 28. Uzbekistan IUCN/World Bank 33. Austria Study Trip on River 38. Cambridge, UK IP&LC-led 43. Italy IPROMO Training Course
Workshop Kigali Kunming-Montreal GBF Manila Workforce for Planetary Health 22. Mexico National IUCN members regional dialogue Tashkent Restoration Danube-Auen National Governance of Protected and and CSVPA Workshop, Ormea,
2. Republic of Congo Three Basins 9. China International Conservation 15. Abu Dhabi All IUCN Commissions Congress San Cristobal de las Casa Park, Conserved Areas Workshop, 44. North Africa Virtual Convenings
29. Turkmenistan Transboundary
Summit Brazzaville Congress in Taipei Taiwan Meeting, 23. Mexico Perspectives: Protected Conservation and Connectivity 34. Spain Seminar on Public-Private 39. Spain Greenlist Workshop Malaga, in Arabic
3. South Africa Green list Forum, 10. Malaysia 1st Pahang Tiger Summit 16. United Arab Emirates UNFCCC Areas of America Cancun Workshop Ashgabat Partnerships for Protected Areas 40. London, UK Workshop on 45. Samoa SPREP Conference
OECM Bootcamp Kuantan COP 28 24. Canada GEF7 Assembly Vancouver 30. Turkmenistan IUCN and Ministry 35. Czechia World Protected Areas Harmonization of Classifications Apia
4. South Africa OECM Bootcamp 11. United Arab Emirates National 17. Latin America Regional Working of Environmental Protection of Leaders Forum Krkonoše National Park and Nomenclatures of Area-Based 46. Australia World Urban Parks
25. Uzbekistan One Health Workshop Conservation
Protected Areas Workshop Group LAC for 30x30 Turkmenistan MoU, 36. Germany OECMs in Europe: The Congress Adelaide
5. Kenya SBSTTA-25 Nairobi Tashkent
12. China ICIMOD Transboundary 18. Lima, Peru Regional Workshop on 31. Uzbekistan Introduction of Spatial Way Forward workshop Vilm, 41. Cambridge, UK Target 3 47. Australia ACIUCN GBF
6. Cameroon National Biodiversity 26. Kyrgyzstan Target 3 Meetings with Partnership Meeting
Biosphere Workshop Sichuan OECMs Monitoring and Reporting Tool Surkhan 37. Germany Good Practice Workshop Canberra
Strategy Workshop Yaoundé Kyrgyz Government Bishkek
Reserve Guidelines for Sustainable Finance 42. Armenia UK IUCN Europe
7. Thailand Asia Protected Areas 13. India Asian Ranger Forum 19. Canada #NatureForAll Love Fest 27. Kyrgyzstan WCPA Steering 48. Antarctica IUCN Task Force on
Guwahati, Vancouver 32. Belgium Technical Workshop on Writing Workshop Vilm, Congress Yerevan, Antarctica
Partnership Workshop Bangkok Committee Meeting Chunkurcha,
Target 3 Brussels,
20. Canada IMPAC5 Vancouver
88
DELIVERING ON IUCN WORLD CONSERVATION BUILDING AND SHARING
CONGRESS (WCC) RESOLUTIONS KNOWLEDGE
A core mandate for WCPA is the development of scientific knowledge,
Resolutions represent the main body of IUCN’s general policy technical guidance and advice, and policy advocacy. WCPA has several
and are derived from the motions process, the mechanism publication series, developed with global contributions and peer review,
by which IUCN members influence third parties and guide often in multiple languages, along with a peer-reviewed journal (PARKS), a
knowledge
the policy and programme of IUCN. regular newsletter, technical reports, and technical notes. In 2023, members products in 2023
Recommendations from over 66 resolutions from the 2021 of WCPA’s Specialist Groups, Task Forces, and Themes produced a vast
IUCN Congress in Marseille and 2016 IUCN Congress in Jeju body of knowledge products. A comprehensive list of our publications in
2023 can be found in Annex I.
66
are relevant to the mandate and vast Programme of Work of
the WCPA.
Resolutions calling for specific action from WCPA are Progress in 2023
prioritised through the work of the Commission’s Themes,
In 2023, eight new publications came out in our technical and good
Specialist Groups, and Task Forces. In 2023, WCPA made
practices series. Several of these were translations, with the major new
good progress on a number of resolutions (as seen in the
publications being Addressing ecological connectivity in the development
Resolutions
table/infographic)
of roads, railways and canals and Site-level tool for identifying other effective
The development of technical guidance and area-based conservation measures (OECMs) : first edition. Additionally,
engagement in policy advocacy is a core mandate of the from the 2020 and WCPA coordinated a major publication on implementing Target 3 of the
WCPA. The Commission engaged in the development and 2016 WCCs that Global Biodiversity Framework, aimed at increasing coverage of protected
dissemination of technical guidance and in policy advocacy and conserved areas to 30 percent of land and ocean by 2030. After several
that related to 19 Resolutions (as listed below).
are relevant to the years of work, The World at Night: preserving natural darkness for heritage
49
2021–2025 WCPA conservation and night sky appreciation (Urban Conservation Strategies
The WCPA supported the planning and/or creation of
work programme Specialist Group) was also published in early 2024.
10 new Task Forces whose Terms of Reference address
specific recommendations within 11 resolutions. In 2023, PARKS published 19 papers contributed by 70 authors from 26
technical
19
countries. Some key issues covered: safeguarding ranger rights and well-
WCPA continues to support the work of the KBA Partnership
being, protected area network establishment and 30 x 30, protected area
(WCC-2016-Res-041), remains engaged with the strategic
environmental and economic value, threats and impacts on protected and
guidance
review of the regional parks congresses in preparation
conserved areas and monitoring, evaluation and assessment.
for the World Parks Congress (WCC-2020-Res-104) and
continues its engagement in the Nature for All Initiative
(WCC-2020-Res-064, with the Commission on Education
WCPA Publications Box 8
Resolutions
and Communication).
Good Practice Series for Protected WCPA’s Technical Note Series:
and Conserved Areas: Since 1998, Short publications that are quick
that WCPA
33 Good Practices have been and easy to produce and do not
developed technical
WCPA and WCC guidance and/or
published and widely downloaded
focusing on topics relevant to
go through the IUCN peer review
process but provide clarity on a
Resolutions engaged in policy WCPA’s mandate. Typically taking technical issue or dialogue on a
several years to produce, they draw particular topic of concern.
New Task Forces advocacy for
on global experience and provide
Joint task forces with other Commissions (3): state-of-the-art guidance to PARKS: A biannual peer reviewed,
WCC-2020-Res-034 Ecological Integrity in the GBF practitioners. on-line, open access journal
(with CEM) published in English with French
39
WCC-2020-114 Integrated solutions to the biodiversity Technical Report Series: Launched and Spanish summaries. There are
and climate crises (IUCN-wide) in 2014, this series focuses more no publication fees. It has an
10
WCC-2020-Res-107 Reducing the impact of fisheries on specific methodologies or impact score of 3.05 and is ranked
on biodiversity (IUCN-wide) provides an overview of key issues 70th of 192 journals in the nature
relating to conservation and and landscape conservation
WCPA Task Forces (7)
Task forces
management. category of Scopus, the citation
Restoration (WCC-2020-Res-009, Res-035) database. Whilst maintaining high
Spatial Planning (WCC-2020-Res-081) Issues paper series: Currently academic credibility, PARKS is
peer-reviewed
Harmonization (WCC-2020-Res-081)
planned or created scientific
under development, this new series primarily for people involved
© yale-cohen-unsplash
by WCPA that aim
© jeff-jewiss-unsplash
Protected Area downgrading, downsizing and will address topical issues related practically in protected areas and publications
degazettement (PADDD) (WCC-2020-Res-084) to address specific to protected areas and OECMs, to OECMS. Editors encourage authors
Human wildlife conflict (WCC-2020-Res-101) recommendations spark debate and provide up-to- who do not otherwise find time to
One health (WCC-2020-Res-135) the-minute perspectives from the report their findings or who do not
within resolutions
Conservation effectiveness (WCC-2020-Res-125) Commission. speak English as a first language.
Guidelines for applying Governance of protected Guidelines for applying Urban protected areas: profiles Guidelines for Cultural and spiritual A global register of Recognising and reporting
the IUCN protected area areas: from understanding protected area management and best practice guidelines geoconservation in protected significance of nature competences for protected other effective area-based
management categories to to action categories and conserved areas area practitioners conservation measures
3 languages. English, French, English
marine protected areas 4 languages. English, French, 6 languages. English, French,
2 languages. English and Chinese Spanish 5 languages. English, French, 4,064 downloads (2022) 5 languages. English, French,
English Spanish, Portuguese, 53,891 downloads (2023) 2,602 downloads (2023) Spanish, German and Arabic Spanish, Nepali and Burmese Spanish, Portuguese, Korean
8,998 downloads (2023) 36,434 downloads (2022) 5,141 downloads (2022) 10,078 downloads (2023) 2,140 downloads (2023) and Chinese
2,513 downloads (2023)
6,590 downloads (2022) 15,293 downloads (2022) 6,721 downloads (2022) 6,549 downloads (2023)
Coming Soon
In 2024-25, several important new publications* are
under development, including:
• Recognising and respecting ICCAs overlapped
by protected areas (Governance, Equity and Rights
Specialist Group) – early 2024.
• A framework for monitoring biodiversity in
protected areas and OECMs – concepts, methods,
and technologies (OECM Specialist group) –
Site-level tool for identifying Protected Areas Benefits
Transboundary conservation: Adapting to climate change Wilderness protected areas Large-scale marine mid-2024. other effective area-based Assessment Tool + (PA-
a systematic and integrated protected areas conservation measures BAT+)
English English • Protected and conserved area finance: good
approach
4,435 downloads (2023) 3,358 downloads (2023) English practices (Sustainable Finance Specialist Group) – (OECMs): first edition
English
English 4,153 downloads (2022) 1,526 downloads (2022) 2,067 downloads (2023) mid 2024. 6 languages. English, French, 1,132 downloads (2023)
2,231 downloads (2023) 2,021 downloads (2022) Chinese, Indonesian, Portuguese
2,536 downloads (2022)
• Protected and conserved areas for inland waters
and Spanish
(Freshwater Specialist Group) – late 2024.
3,824 downloads (2023)
• Building Trust with Rangers and Communities
20%
(Capacity Development Thematic Group) –
October 2024.
• Guidance to enhance climate change mitigation
in protected areas (Climate Change Specialist Group)
– 2025.
*some titles are provisional
Ranger Awards
RECOGNISING CONSERVATION The IUCN WCPA International Ranger Awards recognize one
HEROES
of our most important assets: rangers working in protected
and conserved areas who are responsible for managing large
tracts of the planet’s lands and waters. These women and
As the leading global network of Protected and Conserved Areas professionals in the world,
men are fundamental to environmental security and human
WCPA recognises individuals and organisations for their dedication and achievements to
well-being, yet remain insufficiently recognized for their
conservation. In 2023, WCPA recognized conservation heroes through the Fred Packard
contributions. They are protectors, educators, community
Awards, the Kenton Miller Award, and the Ranger Awards.
facilitators and wildlife monitors, working in protected areas,
private reserves, Indigenous territories and community
Fred Packard Awards conservancies. Most importantly, the world’s rangers are
The Fred Packard Award is named for the individual who served as Secretary to the IUCN fundamental to the recovery of nature and the successful
WCPA in the 1970s and is presented by the Commission in recognition of “outstanding implementation of global biodiversity targets such as Target 3.
service to protected areas.”
The IUCN WCPA International Ranger Awards are supported
Dr. Eleanor Sterling was a biologist and social scientist serving as Director of the Hawaiʻi by the generosity of donors and partner organisations such as
Institute of Marine Biology after more than two decades leading the American Museum of the International Ranger Federation, Universal Ranger Support
Natural History’s Center for Biodiversity and Conservation. She received the Fred Packard Alliance and the Thin Green Line Foundation that work
Award in recognition of more than 30 years’ work advancing just and effective conservation. tirelessly to advance and progress the conditions for rangers
With experience in North and South America, Africa, Asia, and Oceania, Dr. Sterling’s around the world.
research has built the tools to place Indigenous knowledge at the heart of conservation
practice. Her work pioneered new approaches to biodiversity monitoring, resulting in over
120 publications, stronger protected area management, and the establishment of locally- 2023 IUCN WCPA Ranger
managed conservation areas in biodiverse and unique ecosystems. In particular, she was Award Winners
key to shaping the IUCN-WCPA Strategic Framework for Capacity Development at the 2014
Dr. Eleanor Sterling Ismael Gálvez Gálvez
World Parks Congress in Sydney and guided the implementation of elements supporting
El Triunfo Biosphere Reserve, Mexico
Indigenous peoples and local communities.
Dr. Kristina Gjerde is a lawyer and Senior High Seas Advisor to the IUCN Secretariat, Biological Corridor 3 Ranger Team
who received the Fred Packard Award for her efforts over the course of three decades to Phub Dhendup, Jigme Dorji, Jigmy Zangmo, Lhapchu
secure protections in international law for the ocean beyond national jurisdiction. A global Tshering, Neten Tshering, Pema Rinchen, Tandin Wangchuk,
advocate for marine protected areas, she has authored over 150 publications and since Tenzin Dema, Tshering, Yadu Kumar Kami
2002 has been instrumental in leading the WCPA High Seas Specialist Group to advance Bhutan
a global strategy for high seas marine protected areas. Alongside her work with IUCN, she
co-founded the Deep Sea Conservation Coalition, the Global Ocean Biodiversity Initiative, Anton Mzimba
the Sargasso Sea Commission, the High Seas Alliance, and the Deep Ocean Stewardship Timbavati Private Nature Reserve, South Africa
Initiative. Dr. Gjerde has also served as an advisor on many international science and policy
Tubbataha Reefs Natural Park Ranger Team
boards, including the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development and
Segundo Conales Jr., Noel Bundal, Jeffrey David,
Schmidt Ocean Institute.
Dr. Kristina Gjerde Crescencio Caranay
Tubbataha Reefs Natural Park and World Heritage Site,
Kenton Miller Award Philippines
Named for Dr. Kenton R. Miller, a Royal Belum State Park ‘Menraq’ Team
leading figure in conservation, the Ardi Bin Kembong, Talib Anak Lelaki Mat Razi, Fahmi
Kenton R. Miller Award for Innovation Bin Jali, Sufian Bin Raman, Safian Anak Lelaki Latif
in Protected Areas Management Royal Belum State Park, Malaysia
celebrates individuals who are taking
bold steps to safeguard protected Desniansko-Starohutskyi National Nature Park Ranger
and conserved areas. In 2023, the Team
Kenton R. Miller Award is focused Mykhailo Hrybachov, Iryna Pavlichenko, Svitlana Novik, Denys
specifically on the stewardship of Artemenko, Kateryna Hankina, Mykola Chernigov, Vasyl
marine protected areas. Vasenko, Tetyana Marukha, Serhii Sugakov
Desniansko-Starohutskyi National Nature Park, Ukraine
Dr. María del Carmen García Rivas
is a researcher and ranger with Cristián Andrés Vásquez Bermúdez
25 years’ experience working with Reserva Proaves El Dorado, Colombia
communities to protect wildlife and restore ecosystems. Dr. García Rivas received the Kenton
R. Miller Award for her leadership of the Hurricane Insurance Project in Puerto Morelos Maria Bernadete Silva Barbosa
National Park and her role as a role model for other women rangers and conservation Marinho dos Abrolhos National Park, Brazil
professionals. She was one of Mexico’s first female diving instructors, and amongst the first
women to work with the country’s fishermen and navy. A documentary about her work won Fetiya Ousman
high praise at the 2022 NGO International Film Festival. Babile Elephant Sanctuary, Ethiopia
LOOKING AHEAD
2023 was an extraordinary year for WCPA. It assessment of the status of protected and
began with the celebration of the Kunming- conserved areas around the globe. WCPA will
Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, continue to advance and learn from OECMs
adopted at the end of 2022. WCPA and its experience and to gauge how those areas
members contributed to that landmark contribute to international progress towards
achievement, which marks both the culmination achieving biodiversity targets.
of years of effort and the beginning of new
Recognizing the importance of One Health, an
challenges that are promising and daunting in
integrated, unifying approach that aims to
equal measure.
sustainably balance and optimise the health of
WCPA has much to look forward to in the people, animals, and ecosystems, the WCPA
coming year. The COP 16 of the CBD in Cali, Task Force on Protected Areas and One Health,
Colombia will be an important opportunity to launched in 2023, will improve PCA
gauge progress, identify gaps, and help WCPA management and policy by incorporating One
focus its efforts to support implementation of Health themes. The Task Force will elaborate a
the Convention. At COP 29 of the UNFCCC, role for WCPA in research, policy, and practice.
WCPA will be working to place protected areas at
the centre of biodiversity and climate actions. The coming year will see important steps in our
new marine strategy. We will be advancing our
Deepening the links between those two policy work in the Antarctic and Southern Ocean, as
fora will be a key goal for WCPA in 2024, as will well as supporting MPAs in the High seas.
strengthening partnerships with the CBD
Secretariat and the High Ambition Coalition for The next World Conservation Congress will
Nature and People. Other key gatherings in take place in Abu Dhabi in 2025, so WCPA will
2024 include the World Protected Areas Leaders be busy in 2024 preparing for that key event.
Forum in Finland in July and the 12th World WCPA members will participate in IUCN
Wilderness Congress in the US in August. Regional Conservation Fora to ensure that
protected and conserved areas remain central
The new Protected Planet Specialist Group will
to the global conservation agenda.
be coming online in 2024. The goal of the
group is to leverage the WCPA network in WCPA’s scope and influence continues to grow.
supporting the recognition and reporting of As this report shows, our members have made
PCAs and OECMs to the World Database on enormous contributions to global conservation
PAs and OECMs. The Specialist Group will over the past year. While much remains to be
contribute to the next edition in the Protected done, we are confident that 2024 will mark
Planet Report series, an authoritative continued progress and achievement.
© redcharlie-unsplash
36 | WCPA impact report 2023 WCPA impact report 2023 | 37
Contents | Foreword | Message from the Chair | Mission and vision | 2023 by the numbers | Organisational structure | Advancing global biodiversity | Recognizing diverse governance | Contents | Foreword | Message from the Chair | Mission and vision | 2023 by the numbers | Organisational structure | Advancing global biodiversity | Recognizing diverse governance |
Guiding the protection for biodiversity | Global framework | Marine conservation | Capacity for conservation | Positioning protection | Constituencies for nature | Conservation efforts | WCC Resolutions Guiding the protection for biodiversity | Global framework | Marine conservation | Capacity for conservation | Positioning protection | Constituencies for nature | Conservation efforts | WCC Resolutions
| Sharing knowledge | WCPA publication statistics | Conservation heroes | Looking ahead | Acknowledgements | Appendix I | Appendix II | Sharing knowledge | WCPA publication statistics | Conservation heroes | Looking ahead | Acknowledgements | Appendix I | Appendix II
Earth Insight, Leave it in the Ground Initiative (LINGO), and IUCN Mallarach, Josep Maria. (2022). Forward to Protected by Prayer. Hoecker, T.J., Parks, S.A., Krosby, M. and Dobrowski, S.Z. 2023.
World Commission on Protected Areas. (2023). Losing Ground: Sacred Natural Sites of the Mediterranean, Zogib, L. and Widespread exposure to altered fire regimes under 2 C warming is
Fossil Fuel Extraction Threats to Protected Areas Around the World. Spissinger-Bang, S., eds. Diverse Earth Publication. (CSVPA SG) projected to transform conifer forests of the Western United States.
Earth Insight, LINGO, and IUCN WCPA. (PACC SG) Communications Earth & Environment, 4(1), p.295. (Wilderness SG)
Mallarach, J. M. (2022). Forward to Bells boscos vells. Agrupació
Cannizzo, Z.J., Belle, E.M., Smith, R.B. and Mommsen, T.P. (2023). Naturalista i Ecologista de la Garrotxa. (CSVPA SG) Kreider, M.R., Jaffe, M.R., Berkey, J.K., Parks, S.A. and Larson, A.J.
Climate Change—Protected Areas as a Tool to Address a Global 2023. The scientific value of fire in wilderness. Fire Ecology, 19(1),
Crisis. In Managing Protected Areas: People and Places, pp.295– Bernbaum, E. (2022). Sacred Mountains of the World, 2nd edition. p.36. (Wilderness SG)
325. Cham, Switzerland: Springer International Publishing. (PACC SG) Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. (CSVPA SG)
Mulrooney, D. and Jones, B. 2023. The value of natural capital in
Verschuuren, B. (2023). Conceptualising Spiritscapes : The Canada’s National Parks and National Marine Conservation Areas.
Urban Conservation Petroglyphic Complexes of the Mongolian Altai World Heritage PARKS, 29(2), pp.41–51. (Wilderness SG)
Welch, D., Dick, R., Treviño, K., Longcore, T., Rich, C., Hearnshaw, J., site and the wider biocultural landscape. In Routledge Handbook
Ruggles, C., Dalton, A., Barentine, J. and Gyarmathy, I. (2024). The of Cultural Landscape Practice, Brown, S., Goetcheus, C., eds. Thomsen, J.M., Rice, W.L., Rushing, J.F. and Armatas, C.A. 2023.
world at night: Preserving natural darkness for heritage conservation London, UK: Taylor & Francis. (CSVPA SG) US wilderness in the 21st century: A scoping review of wilderness
and night sky appreciation. IUCN WCPA Good Practice Guidelines visitor use management research from 2000 to 2020. Journal of
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(Caves and Karst WG)
Gland, Switzerland: IUCN WCPA. 6pp. (Wilderness SG)
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Evaluation of GNSS-based Volunteered Geographic Information Armatas, C.A., L.K. Cerveny, K. Quiocho, J.J. Sánchez, K.M. Leong,
ecological networks and corridors in a sixth language with the
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case study of the Bavarian Forest National Park, Germany. Applied Embracing the public participation process for developing desired
Keeley, A., Woodley, S., Lausche, B., Locke, H., Carr, M., Pulsford
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Governance Contexts. Land, 11(1), p.97. (CSVPA SG) wolf recolonization in Colorado. Journal of Applied Ecology, 60(11),
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WCC-2020-Res-107 Reducing the impact of WCC-2020-Res-067 Call for Nature in Cities agendas and
fisheries on marine biodiversity Strengthening the IUCN Urban Alliance
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WCC-2020-Res-128 Acting for the conservation and sustain-
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