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CENTER for BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY Because life is good
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Endangered wildlife knows no borders. The Center works with grassroots conservation and cultural groups in other countries to secure a future for diverse species and habitats around the world. We work to protect global biodiversity where U.S. and international laws can be applied and successfully hold the U.S. government accountable for its actions threatening species around the globe.

ABOUT OUR INTERNATIONAL WORK

The Center protects species as distinct from each other as the Okinawa dugong, Puerto Rico rock frog, and three-wattled bellbird in places as far-flung as New Zealand and Russia. We take action under treaties like the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species and the North American Free Trade Agreement, as well as U.S. law, to ensure that American government activities and projects abroad don’t hurt endangered species there. We also work through the United Nations process to establish safeguards for international wildlands and the animals and plants that depend on them. The scope of our international program is rapidly expanding.

HOW WE DO IT

• Scientific research
• Coalition building with local allies
• Petitions and legal action under U.S. and international law
• Global policy advocacy
• Creative media

MILESTONES

Our International Program:

• In 2003, brought the first-ever international lawsuit under the U.S. National Historic Preservation Act, challenging construction of an American military base in Okinawa, Japan that would damage important remaining habitat of the Okinawa dugong.

• Used NAFTA to secure an international investigation into the health of the San Pedro River in Mexico and Arizona and again to stop construction of a natural gas facility on the U.S.-Mexico border that could have devastated the Xantus’s murrelet and other rare seabirds.

• In 2006, filed a lawsuit seeking Endangered Species Act protection for 56 vanishing birds from around the world.

• In 2006, led a dozen conservation organizations from the United States and Canada in petitioning the World Heritage Committee to add Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park to the List of World Heritage sites as “in danger” due to impacts from climate change.

• Secured the adoption by the Global Convention on Biological Diversity of a historic “Global Strategy for Plant Conservation.”

• Published a groundbreaking, comprehensive report on the vertebrate species of the Bering Sea, now translated and used as a teaching aid in Russia.

• Along with more than 30 other organizations in the United States, Panama, and Costa Rica, petitioned the World Heritage Committee to ascertain the level of threats faced by La Amistad International Park, a World Heritage site shared by Panama and Costa Rica.

SPOTLIGHT CAMPAIGNS

 
The Okinawa dugong, a gentle, highly endangered manatee relative, could become a casualty of U.S. military construction off the coast of Japan.
 
Birds of the world: We seek legal protection for scores of imperiled nesters from the frozen Arctic to the tropical paradise of Fiji.
 
The U.S.-Mexico borderlands — millions of lovely, remote acres where jaguars and pronghorns roam — are at high risk from unnecessary security and immigration measures.
 
The Center takes on Army brass and developers to save the San Pedro River, a transnational watershed and seasonal home to half of America’s bird species.
 
We lead an international coalition to rescue Panama’s ecological jewel, La Amistad, from four planned dams.

+ INTERNATIONAL CAMPAIGNS

+ SPECIES

+ PUBLICATIONS

Contact the International Program.
Photo © Paul S. Hamilton