Elephants: A Crisis of Too Many, Not Too Few
Reflections and recommendations on elephants, ecosystems and people in Botswana. There is a way forward.READ MORE
Reflections and recommendations on elephants, ecosystems and people in Botswana. There is a way forward.READ MORE
A personal perspective on the ethics and emotive narrative of trophy hunting.READ MORE
The hunting conservationist’s perspectives can be presented in ways that touch emotions and make change imaginable.READ MORE
The bipartisan America’s Conservation Enhancement (ACE) Act contains a number of long-standing priorities for sportsmen and other conservationists and authorizes critical funding for habitat and wildlife. Now it must pass the House.READ MORE
An Alaskan ecology professor takes to the airwaves with a science podcast for hunters—or is it a hunting podcast for scientists?READ MORE
Hunters must present their case in all forms of social media—the tools are there, but long-term strategic commitment and the action of individual hunters is lacking. Here is how it could be done.READ MORE
What constitutes the sportsmanlike pursuit of game? Is fair chase still fair? How do we explain hunting ethics, and ourselves, to the general public?READ MORE
This article, by a non-hunting research scientist who works in Tanzania, adds a voice of reason to the overheating debate on trophy hunting. Strampelli makes convincing arguments for a more nuanced approach by hunters, non-hunters and anti-hunters alike.READ MORE
On 25 November 2014, Paul Tudor Jones II delivered the second Andrew Carnegie Lecture at the University of Glasgow. Here are extracts of his lecture and observations. During a time of overheating controversy about the “right” approaches to conservation, his remarks focus on solutions, which are as valid today as they were five years ago.READ MORE