Marsh Award for Wildlife Conservation

This Award is run in partnership with the Environmental Investigation Agency and recognises the work of an EIA local partner for them to use towards their activities and campaigns.

This Award recognises those who have made an outstanding contribution to wildlife conservation and who has furthered the work of their an EIA’s campaigns in this area.

Greenhood Nepal and The PAMS Foundation 2025

Greenhood Nepal 

Greenhood Nepal is a national, science-driven, non-governmental, conservation organisation, founded by an accomplished field researcher focusing on research that shapes law, policy, conservation practice and enforcement. This combination of applied academia and advocacy is a powerful tool in affecting change in Nepal, which is both a source and transit country for threatened species trafficked into China. The tackling of this trafficking requires a multi-pronged approach and engagement with community groups, policymakers, law enforcement agencies, the media and wider society. Greenhood Nepal has demonstrated innovation and courage in investigating wildlife crime in Nepal and in developing tools to counter it, including exposing and challenging the disparity in law enforcement approaches to confiscating illegal items from different sectors of society. The organisation also conducted the first ever systematic interviews of imprisoned wildlife offenders to better understand their motivations, which has greatly helped the development of countermeasures by government, charities and donors. Greenhood Nepal also provides a platform for young scientists and researchers who then go on to careers supporting the prevention of wildlife crime. They have created a network of national and international non-governmental organisations who they co-operate and consult with to prevent and tackle wildlife crime and trafficking. 

The PAMS Foundation, Tanzania 

The PAMS Foundation was established in 2006 and has made significant strides in wildlife conservation, particularly in combatting elephant poaching and promoting human-wildlife coexistence. Their mission is to empower the people and communities who protect wildlife and wild places and enable a world where the value of nature is understood and communities are equipped to peacefully co-exist with nature. The PAMS Foundation was founded to address a critical and growing need in Tanzania to protect wildlife and their ecosystems from the increasing threat of poaching, habitat destruction and weak enforcement. They understand that lasting conservation can only succeed through a combination of enforcement, education and empowerment and have created sustainable, community-driven and intelligence-led solutions that go beyond traditional conservation models. Whilst they work primarily in Tanzania, they have supported projects across Africa and collaborate with stakeholders internationally, especially relating to the illegal trade and the organised criminal networks involved with this. In recent years they have adapted to challenges including the pandemic and expanded their impact through innovative projects and partnerships including supporting a National Anti-Poaching Taskforce and the Tanzania Police Detection Dogs Unit. The PAMS Foundation has a pivotal role in safeguarding Tanzania’s rich biodiversity and fostering harmonious coexistence between humans and wildlife. 

Previous Winners

Conservation South Luangwa

Conservation South Luangwa (CSL) works on the frontline of wildlife conservation and human-wildlife coexistence in the South Luangwa Valley, in Zambia. CSL began as a small organisation made up of committed individuals from the local community aiming to tackle the scourge of snaring and poaching in the Luangwa Valley National Park. The organisation has now grown to employ 120 full-time staff members, who are supported by volunteers from the community.  

CSL has now developed to create a professional team recruited from the community. They were one of the first organisations to effectively embrace equality and diversity, hiring female scouts to work alongside male colleagues. They have created a base in the heart of the community and provided water access as well as education and housing to the families in their employment and have been widely recognised as being a key stakeholder in consultations around management of wildlife and activities relating to illegal wildlife trade. 

CSL’s operational capabilities include an anti-poaching unit, and the provision of training to both government scouts as well as their own team. They engage in Human Wildlife Conflict programmes of work within the community and have created an efficient aerial surveillance team, innovative detection dog unit, and a veterinary outreach programme. These vital activities and initiatives provide support to Zambia’s department of National Parks and Wildlife, significantly supporting Zambia’s efforts to counter wildlife crime. 

The Wildlife Friends Foundation, Thailand

The Wildlife Friends Foundation of Thailand is a partner in a regional project with EIA and Education for Nature Vietnam and is leading the documentation of the 54 facilities across Thailand that between them house over 1,900 tigers. This includes documenting the business operations, the status of the tigers, observing suspicious activity, examining linkages with tiger seizures and connections to tiger farmers and trade networks operating in and through Laos. This is part of an ongoing project set to run to the end of March 2024.  

Any illegal or suspicious activity is reported to the Department of National Parks and other enforcement agencies to inform official inspections and investigations. WFFT have also been instrumental in advocating for reform of national legislation and regulations, strengthening penalties for illegal wildlife trade and will lead efforts to advocate for amendments to Thai legislation relating to the keeping, breeding and disposal of captive tigers.  

As a wildlife rescue centre, WFFT have been asked to step in and take care of tigers from the Phuket Zoo, which has recently gone bankrupt. The 11 tigers have been housed in terrible conditions at the “zoo”, and WFFT are in the process of transferring them to their enclosures where the animals will enjoy lifetime care in more spacious enclosures with outdoor areas, good nutrition, veterinary care and peace. The need for WFFT to step in and rescue the tigers reflects the urgency for reform in Thailand, and the tragic story of these tigers will help raise the profile of the need for a tiger farm phase out plan.   

WFFT is in a position of knowledge and experience to advise the Governments of Thailand and Laos on how to implement global objectives to phase out tiger farms responsibly. WFFT also rescues primates, elephants and other wildlife subject to the pet trade and tourist exploitation, whilst also gathering information on how the traders in threatened species operate. Combining trade investigation, campaigning and practical guidance on solutions, WFFT is key stakeholder in global efforts to hold Governments to account over their implementation of commitments under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), to combat illegal tiger and other wildlife trade. Phuket Zoo is just the first facility and already WFFT have had enquiries from other facilities.