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Getty Award
J.Paul Getty Award for Conservation Leadership
Mr. Samba is a community leader in the Malagasy Republic in Madagascar
Established in 2006 and administered by World Wildlife Fund, the Getty Award for Conservation Leadership is made possible through the generous support of Gordon Getty. The award recognizes contributions to conservation through personal leadership in one of three annually rotating areas: political leadership, scientific leadership, and community leadership. Mr. Roger Samba was selected as the winner of the 2008 award in recognition of his outstanding community leadership in support of conservation.
Mr. Samba is a community leader in the Malagasy Republic. As the president of the remote village of Andavadoaka in southwest Madagascar, and with no conservation background, Samba organized the world’s first community run no-take zone for octopus, a local species of critical economic importance to the community, driving legislation on this and other laws to benefit the environment. This work became a model for seasonal closures and was behind the village being awarded the 2007 UN Equator Prize.
"Each year, the J. Paul Getty Award honors one of the world’s top conservationists who is helping to build the leaders of tomorrow,” said Carter Roberts, president and CEO of WWF– US, who administers the award for the Getty family. “This year the award honors Roger Samba, whose work – which originates at the community level and reaches far beyond – embodies the local to global approach so crucial in finding lasting solutions to environmental problems.”
For generations, the indigenous semi-nomadic Vezo people of Andavadoaka, Madagascar – Mr. Samba’s hometown - have depended on artisanal fishing activities for their livelihoods, culture and tradition. But in recent years, the region’s marine resources faced growing threats from expanding coastal populations, unsustainable tourism and an increase in international fishing fleets.
Mr. Samba spent much of the last five years working to protect the region’s fragile marine biodiversity and habitats. He created a blueprint for empowering local communities to take on management of coral reefs and related habitats. Since 2003, plans for creation of community-managed marine protected areas have spread from one village to more than 30 in the region. This work has inspired the development of ambitious alternative livelihood and environmental education initiatives, influenced national fisheries legislation, and brought unprecedented attention to marine and coastal conservation issues. Fishermen and women have traveled from across Madagascar and beyond to learn from the Andavadoaka model.
“Under Samba’s leadership,” wrote Alasdair Harris, director of scientific research at Blue Ventures, who nominated Roger, “the Andavadoaka project proved so successful that eight neighbouring villages instituted their own protected areas for octopus in order to reap similar benefits. The national government of Madagascar in 2005 also used the project as a model to create similar seasonal closures across the country. The project is a proven example of how economic development can both inspire and benefit from the conservation of natural resources.”
The J. Paul Getty Award for Conservation Leadership is one of the world’s most prestigious awards devoted to conservation. Established in 1974 as The Getty Prize by the late J. Paul Getty, the award was later renamed the J. Paul Getty Award for Conservation Leadership. The award is intended to encourage conservation innovation and heighten public awareness of the need for conservation. Nominees for the Getty Award are submitted to WWF by conservation organizations around the world and the winner is chosen by an independent jury of individuals from a wide and distinguished array of expertise.
The award is unique in that it not only recognizes today’s leaders in conservation but also helps develop conservation leadership for tomorrow by establishing graduate fellowships in the name of the winner and J. Paul Getty. Mr. Samba will use his award to establish fellowships for students pursuing masters, doctoral, and post-doctoral degrees in conservation-related fields at a university of his choice in Madagascar.






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