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Why Do People Kill Lions?

March 9, 2009
In the past two decades, more than half of Africa’s lions have been wiped out. As Bernard Kissui wrote in his lion blog, the remaining populations of the African lion are restricted to small and isolated protected areas, where, despite concerted…

Why Conservation Action Offers Hope Amidst Africa’s Biodiversity Crisis

July 8, 2024
Africa is extraordinarily biodiverse, hosting many iconic species and unique ecological phenomena that present the continent with great opportunities for sustainable development. However, Africa’s species, habitats, and ecosystems are increasingly…

Why Collaring Lions Enhances Conservation and Coexistence

December 17, 2024
As dawn breaks over Taita Hills Wildlife Sanctuary, the expansive Tsavo landscape in Kenya awakens. Spanning over 48,000 square kilometers – nearly twice the size of Rwanda – the Tsavo landscape’s vast savannah grasslands, volcanic hills, and…

Why AMCEN matters in delivering for people and biodiversity

August 14, 2023
The African Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN) is a forum that brings together ministers, technical experts, and non-state actors from Africa’s environmental agencies to draft and chart forward biodiversity priorities for the…

Why Africa’s Youth Voice is Vital to COP16 Biodiversity Talks

October 24, 2024
Africa’s role in the ongoing United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) Conference of Parties (COP16) is critical. Home to 25% of the world’s biodiversity and a predominantly young population, Africa's engagement in these crucial…

Why Africa's natural ecosystems are essential for migratory birds

May 9, 2022
Twice a year, at least 4,000 species of migratory birds worldwide will depart from their homes and move to a completely different geography, some traveling thousands of kilometers, to pursue optimal conditions for eating, breeding, and raising their…

Who Gains? Who Loses? Biodiversity in Savanna Systems

March 25, 2013
AWF Discussion Papers, CC-DP-3

White Rhinos Survive War

October 1, 1998
At least 20 northern white rhinos, the most endangered rhino subspecies, have survived the civil war in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Four babies have been born since the conflict abated in May 1997. Congo's Garamba National Park contains the…

White House Briefing

July 1, 1998
AWF President Michael Wright was among experts from several conservation organizations invited to brief White House officials on environmental and food-security issues in Africa prior to President Clinton's landmark trip to the continent in late…

Whisker Patterns, Lion Mating, and the Missing Cubs

July 2, 2009
I’m pleased to note that the Tarangire Lion project has some additional help this summer--Rae Wynn-Grant, a master’s candidate at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. Here she tells about her experiences in the field so far. My…

Where Your Coffee is Born

May 28, 2008
I'm in Nyeri, Kenya, where they grow the world's best coffee. This is the site of the AWF-Starbucks coffee project. You can see some of the green coffee farms on the steep slopes of Nyeri behind us. This is John Kibocha, a coffee farmer trained…

Where We Work: Rwanda

January 5, 2023
Passthrough page

Where We Work: Faro

July 5, 2023

Where We Work

January 17, 2020
There's as much hope as there is natural beauty Just as the land across Africa is vast and varied, so are the ecological and economic challenges. While some nations contend with political tensions, others must ease the struggle for resources…

Where We Work

July 27, 2023

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African Wildlife Foundation is headquartered in Nairobi, Kenya, a registered 501(c)3 organization in the United States and a registered charity in the United Kingdom and Canada.