Freeland Foundation

Freeland Foundation
Founded early 2000
Type non-governmental not-for-profit organization
Focus illegal wildlife trade, human trafficking, law enforcement capacity building training, preservation of biodiversity
Location
  • Bangkok, Thailand
Area served
Southeast Asia
Slogan If we keep a place for nature, nature keeps a place for us
Mission stop wildlife and human trafficking for the protection of the environment and vulnerable people
Website www.freeland.org
Formerly called
WildAid, PeunPa

The Freeland Foundation (rendered FREELAND Foundation by the foundation) is an international non-governmental organization headquartered in Asia which works in Asia on environmental conservation and on human rights and is headquartered in Asia. The organization intends to stop wildlife and human trafficking.

The organization combats the illegal wildlife trade and habitat destruction. Its environmental conservation programs are designed to address threats to endangered flora and fauna. This includes poaching and logging in protected areas, smuggling, and the subsequent sale and consumption of wildlife. With funding from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Freeland Foundation provides expertise and support to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Wildlife Enforcement Network (ASEAN Wildlife Enforcement Network), a regional inter-governmental initiative to combat wildlife smuggling.

Overall aims

Freeland intends to increase wildlife protection, combat illegal wildlife trafficking, and reduce global consumption of and demand for endangered species. It intends to combat human slavery and wildlife trafficking by increasing law enforcement capacity, supporting vulnerable communities and raising awareness.

Anti-crime work

Freeland provides training and technical assistance to police, customs and environmental agencies in the ASEAN region to combat poaching, illegal logging and human trafficking. It cooperates with government task forces and facilitates cross-border inter-agency co-operation and civil society action. The organization’s trainers are former government enforcement officers.

Community work

Freeland helps vulnerable rural communities to develop sustainable and environmentally friendly businesses, such as plant nurseries, fish and mushroom farms. the organization also supports communities to develop renewable energy sources and reforestation projects.

Awareness campaigns

Freeland's public awareness campaigns focus on the roles that consumer demand and apathy play in wildlife and human trafficking, while also highlighting the threats these crimes pose to natural ecosystems, and global biodiversity. One such campaign is Piece of Responsibility.[1]

History

Freeland Foundation was founded in 2000. It works in partnership with governments, communities, corporations, and other NGOs. It was previously known as WildAid (Thailand) and changed its name to Freeland Foundation in early 2009.

Programs

Training

Freeland's training programs are in Southeast Asia, aimed at local staff and communities. Freeland offered capacity building and support programs include: Protected Area Training Program; the Investigations Training Program; the Border Inspection and Controlled Delivery Program; the Judicial and Prosecutor Awareness Program; and the Poachers to Protectors Alternative Livelihoods Program.[2]

Intervention

Reforestation

Freeland works with park authorities, local communities, schools and private sector partners in reforestation.

Alternative Livelihoods

Freeland's community outreach team encourages villagers to give up illegal poaching and logging activities through a combination of environmental awareness and the development of their own small-scale environmentally friendly businesses.

ASEAN-WEN Support Program

Freeland Foundation, together with TRAFFIC Southeast Asia, implements a USAID-funded Support Program to the ASEAN Wildlife Enforcement Network (ASEAN-WEN). The Support Program conducts national assessments, helped set up the structure of ASEAN-WEN and its Secretariat (Program Coordination Unit), and provides trainings and workshops among ASEAN Member Countries’ wildlife law enforcement officials, prosecutors and the judiciary to counter wildlife crime.

Partners

Freeland developed the “Pattaya Manifesto on Combatting Wildlife Crime in Asia” in 2009.[3]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, July 18, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.