Community Action

HIV/AIDS and Conservation

HIV-AIDS has no borders: Migration can accelerate the spread of emerging diseases such as HIV/AIDS.
© WWF / Judy Oglethorpe

The HIV/AIDS epidemic is having huge and tragic impacts on individuals, families, communities and countries. It is also impacting biodiversity in Africa - affecting both conservation capacity and the use of natural resources. With the Africa Biodiversity Collaborative Group (ABCG) and partners such as the Wildlife and Environmental Society of Malawi, WWF continues to evaluate the connections between HIV/AIDS and the environment to identify coping strategies and best practices for conservationists. Next steps include:

  • Expanding our work in promoting HIV/AIDS awareness and prevention in local communities, and providing AIDS-impacted communities with sustainable livelihood alternatives to relieve environmental pressures.
  • Helping maintain conservation capacity through awareness and prevention programs for conservation workers, including HIV/AIDS workplace policies in environmental organizations.
  • Using lessons learned in Africa to help other vulnerable regions of the world reduce the conservation impacts of HIV/AIDS.

WWF is also planning for the long-term environmental effects of the epidemic, such as changes in demographics, the future livelihood patterns of AIDS orphans and security issues related to AIDS.

Park staff and family in a protected area in Tanzania. The risk of HIV transmission is reduced when staff are posted with their families.
© ABCG / Nancy Gelman

AIDS-related deaths in Africa are seriously affecting conservation programs in protected areas and community-based natural resource management programs. Investments in staff training are being lost as key leaders, managers and others succumb to the disease. The conservation sector is particularly vulnerable because staff is often based in remote areas away from their families, where they are at increased risk of taking other partners and contracting HIV. Their risk is compounded by limited access to medical care.

When rural households lose economically active adults who earned salaries or provided agricultural labor, they often turn to natural resources as a livelihood safety net. This can result in more hunting and fishing, and greater fuelwood collection for the household and sale. More timber is also harvested for coffins. Changes in land use occur as agricultural practices shift with the falling capacity for heavy labor and sale of farm implements for short-term cash. Fire is used more frequently to clear land for agriculture.

HIV-AIDS theatre: In Namibia, community theater is an effective way to communicate HIV/AIDS awareness and prevention messages along with natural resource management education.
© WWF / Judy Oglethorpe

Women are disproportionately affected by the epidemic because they are the main caregivers, and they suffer a higher incidence of the disease in Africa than men. In addition, many of the natural resources traditionally managed by women are in higher demand: water for washing the sick; wood for warmth, boiled drinking water and coffins; and medicinal plants to treat additional infections brought on by AIDS.

Girls in AIDS-affected households tend to be less well-educated because they are needed to help in the home and there is less cash for school expenses. Women have much less time to participate in sustainable natural resource management programs and may lose their land if the male head of the household dies. If all else fails, they may be forced into prostitution to feed their families - which accelerates the spread of HIV.

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Indigenous People in Peru welcoming WWF staff

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WWF Experts

Jenny Springer
Director Indigenous Peoples, Livelihoods and Governance

“People's interactions with their lands and natural resources are an important part of their cultural identities and ways of life...Indigenous peoples are key partners in achieving our conservation goals”

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