Our Conservation Philosophy
Learn about the Snow Leopard Trust's partnership-based approach to wildlife conservation.
How do you save a snow leopard?
Or a tiger, rhino, rare butterfly, or for that matter a patch of
rainforest? These are the questions that every conservation
organization faces, and that challenges all of us. Conservation
actions can take many forms; setting aside lands, answering critical
research questions, working to change government policies, partnering
with communities, enforcing anti-poaching laws, or some mix of these
and other efforts.

At the Snow
Leopard Trust we use a combination of approaches that focus on
partnering with communities in snow leopard habitat. But as we
build
community partnerships we use
science and research
to determine key snow leopard habitat, assess wildlife-human conflict
levels, and identify potential resources for conservation
programs. Once we have this information we can prioritize the
areas where we will work. High priority areas include key snow
leopard habitat, with a history of conflict between predators and the
communities, and potential resources to sustain a community-based
conservation program.

When the science and research identifies an area as a priority site, we
spend a lot of time with local residents, listening to their hopes and
concerns, and only then do we take the step of jointly developing a
conservation program. The conservation effort must meet four
important goals.
- The protection of snow leopards and their habitat, involving local communities in this effort.
- An improved quality of life for the members of the community.
- The program developed must have a path to becoming
self-sufficient – where after a time it is no longer dependent on donor
dollars.
- The results of the program must be verifiable through monitoring programs.

The Snow Leopard Trust strives to follow these principles in all its
community-based conservation efforts and throughout this website you
will read about the different projects that we are implementing with
our
community partners.
While the projects differ in response to the local needs and
conditions, the underlying principles of each of the programs remain
the same. We constantly endeavor to improve our conservation
projects to better meet the needs of cats and humans, and we are seeing
wonderful results at our project sites where the livelihoods of
families and communities have improved greatly and snow leopards are
being protected.