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Is Our Project Succeeding: A Guide to Threat Reduction Assessment for Conservation

Posted by Portal Web Editor last modified Mar 31, 2010 01:59 AM
Contributors: Richard Margoluis, Nick Salafsky
Biodiversity Support Program, Washington, DC In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted material herein is distributed without profit or payment for non-profit research and educational purposes only.

Measuring Project Success. Like any other project, conservation projects are designed to change something,to have an impact on some state or condition. The main goal of this change is to protect biodiversity. One of the major differences we see between conservation projects and other projects, however, is that it is often difficult to define—in clear, operational terms—precisely what it is that conservation projects are trying to achieve. In a business setting, the project goal is usually financial profit and it is usually pretty easy to evaluate how much money a company is making or losing. For a health project, it is relatively easy to measure the health status of a particular population and to track changes over time to measure the success of a given intervention. But for conservation projects, what practical and meaningful measures of project impact are available to us? ...

Author(s): Richard Margoluis , Nick Salafsky

BSP_threatReductionAssmt_55pg_tra.pdf — PDF document, 568Kb

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