Ecological Connectivity: A Conversation on Biodiversity


Date and Time
Monday, April 24, 2023
7:00pm— 8:30pm
Add to calendar
Contact
Tim Hall

An African perspective towards a nature positive future, presented by the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW, website here)

Focus on biodiversity in sub-Saharan Africa, and the link between human activities and endangered wildlife, specifically elephants.  IFAW is working globally with countries and businesses to obtain support and ensure that biodiverse landscapes can be maintained and – where needed – restored.  

Jason Bell
Strategy, Programmes & Field Operations

Jason Bell first joined IFAW in 1997 as the director of the Elephants Program. Within weeks of starting the job, he attended a meeting in Zimbabwe that changed everything—for him and the world.

In the decade prior, poachers had reduced the global elephant population by half. Desperate to save the species, countries around the world agreed to outlaw the ivory trade. By 1997, elephant populations were slowly coming back, and governments holding tons of confiscated ivory saw an opportunity to cash in. When the meeting was over, the ivory ban was lifted.

As a trained zoologist and ecologist, Jason understood that poachers would consider even one sale of ivory as Day One of open season. But for Jason, this wasn’t just bad policy, it was personal: Jason grew up in South Africa, where he and his family would often visit watering holes to watch the herds of elephants.

Stopping the ivory trade was too big for anyone to tackle alone, so Jason started looking for partners. Under his leadership, IFAW worked with partners to secure critical habitats for elephants in Southern and East Africa, as well as India and China. Jason earned the support and buy-in of countless local communities to translocate elephants across the African continent, including moving an entire herd of 83 elephants from the Phirilongwe region of Malawi, where they had been in constant violent conflict with villagers. And collaborating with world-renowned scientists, Jason helped convince the South African government to update its approach to managing elephant populations, bringing national law into alignment with science.

Today, Jason is IFAW’s Executive Vice President of Strategy, Programmes & Field Operations. Drawing on two decades of experience as the Regional Director of Southern Africa, Vice President for International Operations and then Vice President of Conservation & Animal Rescue, Jason guides IFAW’s global strategy as well as on-the-ground operations in more than 40 countries.


Register

Or register manually