This is for a 3.5" PATCH reading: OCEANIA RANGER FORUM - ROTORUA NZ 2022 - INCLUSIVE CONSERVATION
Thia is the logo patch for the Oceania Ranger Forum in Rotorua, held in New Zealand on the 23-25 August, 2022. The Forum was organized by the International Ranger Federation’s (IRF) Oceania regional body – Council of Oceania Ranger Associations (CORA) – proudly supported by The Thin Green Line Foundation (TGLF).
The IRF is a non-profit organization established to raise awareness of, and support, the critical work that rangers do in conserving the world’s natural and cultural heritage. Founded in 1992, the IRF has members from over 50 countries, on six of the seven continents.
As the IRF’s regional body for Oceania, CORA’s mission is to unite Oceania rangers and protected area workers to build on a diverse and dynamic team working towards protecting and making a positive impact on the natural, cultural and recreational resources and places within the Oceania region.
The TGLF protects nature’s protectors by providing vital support to park rangers and their communities who are the front-line of conservation.
The International Ranger Federation (IRF) was founded in 1992 with a signed agreement between the Countryside Management Association (CMA), representing rangers in England and Wales, the Scottish Countryside Rangers Association (SCRA), and the U.S. Association of National Park Rangers (ANPR). The goals of the agreement were to provide a forum for rangers, from around the world, to share their successes and failures in protecting the world?s heritage and to promote information and technology transfer from countries in which protected area management enjoys broad public and government support, to countries in which protected area management is less supported. 60 associations from national, state and territorial entities have affiliated with the IRF, and rangers from other countries have applied for provisional membership in IRF while they attempt to establish ranger associations in their countries.
Park rangers, their ranger associations, and the IRF ensure the world?s terrestrial and marine parks, and the flora and fauna that live in them, are protected from vandalism, poaching, theft, exploitation or destruction. As guardians of our natural and cultural resources, rangers are first on the scene of illegal or unsustainable exploitation of these resources, often at great personal risk. Regional conflict, civil war and political unrest also greatly impact protected areas and the rangers that manage them. Our rangers require special support structures, training and equipment to carryout their jobs. IRF provides training, capacity building and exchange programs to its members in order to ensure park rangers are well trained and properly equipped to manage the world?s most precious wildernesses. The IRF also advocates for good governance and the enactment of enforceable laws that protect rangers from assaults while performing their duties. The IRF is the voice of park rangers, in the international community, in calling for greater support for rangers in carrying out their vital role in the protection of our parks.
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