Thursday, November 4, 2010

Ivy (Conservation) League

Who knew many of the big private conservation organizations in the U.S. are ran by an Ivy League Boy's Club? Wouldn't it make sense to have diverse leaders who are planning for biodiversity conservation? Have I taken the whole "diversity is a good thing" too far?

Here's a quick list with the briefest of information. You decide which one(s) might begin to measure up to your expectations.
  • Trust for Public Lands (TPL): President and CEO William Rogers – MBA from Harvard and unspecified undergraduate degree from Stanford. Prior job was at unspecified Chicago-based real estate development company.


Monday, November 1, 2010

Consercologists

A business person leading a conservation organization is like having a man as your gynecologist. There are probably some very good male gynecologists. But if you want the very best, you should find a woman. After all, women (excluding those who have had sex changes) have been dealing with their female anatomies their entire lives – it’s innate. Women know things about women that men will never know, be able to learn, or be able to understand. Female gynecologists begin their medical training with 20+ years of full-time experience. Male gynecologists, regardless of their rationale for ever wanting to be gynecologists in the first place (I’m sure some must have legitimate reasons), start their medical training 20+ years behind their female counterparts. MBA conservation leaders are similar. 

For conservationists who spent their childhoods fishing, camping, hunting, canoeing, hiking, cross-country skiing and otherwise absorbing nature every chance they got, nature is in their very soul – it’s innate. For most of these people, there was never any doubt what they would do in their adult professional lives. They would never have dreamed of doing anything other than some form of conservation. These are the female gynecologists of the conservation world. These are the people we want to be our leaders. Conservation is their life. It’s in their nature. It's their passion. Their decisions and actions will be profoundly different than the MBA who gets bored with making money in banking and the stock market… the decisions of conservationists at-birth will be better. These are the people we want operating on biodiversity.
 

Conservation's One-legged Stool

The foundation of conservation is three-fold: 1) biodiversity; 2) staff who protect the biodiversity; and 3) constituents who support the protection of biodiversity. This, in essence, is conservation's three-legged stool. Without any one leg, the stool falls over. If any one leg is longer or shorter than the other, the person sitting a top the stool (our beloved conservation leader) is at best off balance. Bottom line, without each leg existing in proportion to the others, balanced conservation is not going to happen. Unfortunately, the forgettable conservation leaders of our time focus solely on constituents, and within constituents, primarily on funders. Little concern is given to the biodiversity or the staff. "Leaders" seem to think, with a lot of money, they themselves could pretty much deal their way to world domination... I mean conservation.

Our stool is severely broken. We need balance. We need respect for and recognition of staff's role in protecting biodiversity and a recognition that the ultimate goal is biodiversity conservation, not basking in leaderless glory.