Название: Nature Conservation
Автор: Peter Marren
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Природа и животные
isbn: 9780007406029
isbn:
Address: 26-28 Underwood Street, London N1 7JQ.
Executive director: Charles Secrett.
Greenpeace
The most headline-making of all respectable environmental organisations was founded in America in 1971. The public first heard about Greenpeace when a group of activists sailed into an atomic testing zone in a battered hire-boat. A UK branch was formed the same year. Greenpeace is an international environment-protection body, funded by individual donations. It specialises in non-violent, direct action: front page pictures of activists being hosed from whaling ships, or waving banners at the top of chimneys, or on derelict oil platforms, alerts public opinion and raises awareness of an issue. Famously, its ship, the Rainbow Warrior, was blown up in Auckland harbour by French agents in 1985. Behind the headlines lie quieter activities: producing reports, lobbying governments, talking to businesses and even conducting research. Greenpeace concentrates on international campaigns, such as nuclear test bans, or the banning of drift nets or mining in the Antarctic. Among recent activities that impinge on nature conservation in Britain are campaigns for renewable energy and against GM crops. It exploits ‘consumer power’ by dissuading companies from using products from ancient forests and peatlands. Greenpeace has 176,000 supporters in the UK and a claimed 2.5 million worldwide. Its slogan: ‘Wanted. One person to change the world’.
Lord Peter Melchett, former chair of Wildlife Link and Executive Director of Greenpeace until 2001. (Greenpeace/Davison)
UK Office: Canonbury Villas, London N1 2PN
Executive director: Peter Melchett (until December 2001)
The link body
Wildlife and Countryside Link (and predecessors)
Wildlife and Countryside Link (originally Wildlife Link) is an umbrella body representing 34 voluntary bodies in the UK with a total of six million members. It is funded by the member organisations, which also take turns to chair its meetings, plus donations from WWF-UK, the Department of the Environment, Transport and the Regions (DETR), English Nature and the Countryside Agency. It functions through various working groups and ‘task forces’, as well as ‘one-off initiatives’ covering a wide range of environmental issues at home and abroad, including rural development, trading in wildlife, land-use planning and the marine environment. Wildlife Link has played an important co-ordinating role in shaping current wildlife protection policies, enabling the voluntary bodies to pool their resources and experience and present a common agenda. It has a small secretariat based in London. In keeping with the spirit of devolution, there are now separate Wildlife and Countryside Links in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
The need for an umbrella body to represent the proliferating voluntary societies was appreciated as early as 1958, when the Council for Nature was formed as a voice for some 450 societies and local institutions, ranging from specialist societies to local museums and local field clubs. Headed by the glitterati of the 1960s conservation world, it helped to establish nature conservation in hearts and minds with events like the two National Nature Weeks and the three Countryside in 1970 conferences. It also helped to set up the Conservation Corps, later to become the BTCV (p. 70), while the Council’s Youth Committee, under Bruce Campbell, did its best to ‘make people of all ages conscious of their responsibility for the natural environment’ (Stamp 1969). Its publications were a monthly broadsheet, Habitat, and a twice-yearly News for Naturalists.
Despite its influence, the Council for Nature was always short of money. By the mid-1970s, it was ailing badly, and four years later had ceased to function. Its publication Habitat was continued by the Council for Environmental Conservation (CoEnCo, now the Environment Council) while its function as an umbrella body was taken on by the newly founded Wildlife Link, then a committee of CoEnCo under Lord (Peter) Melchett. Wildlife Link scored an early success with the Wildlife and Countryside Act (see next chapter). In 1993 the name was changed to Wildlife and Countryside Link to emphasise its wider remit.
Secretariat: 89 Albert Embankment, London SE1 7TP.
Chair: Tony Burton (2001).
Members of Wildlife and Countryside Link |
Bat Conservation Trust |
British Association of Nature Conservationists |
British Ecological Society |
British Mountaineering Council |
British Trust for Conservation Volunteers |
Butterfly Conservation |
Council for British Archaeology |
Council for National Parks |
Council for the Protection of Rural England(CPRE) |
Earthkind |
Environmental Investigation Agency |
Friends of the Earth |
Greenpeace |
Herpetological Conservation Trust |
International Fund for Animal Welfare |
Mammal Society |
Marine Conservation Society |
National Trust |
Open Spaces Society |
Plantlife |
Ramblers’ Association |
Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) |
Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) |
The Shark Trust |
Universities Federation for Animal Welfare |
Whale & Dolphin ConservationSociety |
The Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust |
The wildlife trusts |
Woodland Trust |
World Conservation Monitoring Centre |
Worldwide Fund for Nature – UK |
Young People’s Trust for the Environment& Nature Conservation |
Youth Hostels Association (England & Wales) |
Zoological Society of London |
The special interest groups СКАЧАТЬ