Green Capacity (GC) is a US-based 501(c) (3) not-for-profit
corporation formed to ensure a biologically sustainable future. We 1) conduct
much-needed research, 2) give national biologists and conservationists the
skills they need to preserve biodiversity in their own countries, and 3) ensure
information is shared with all relevant parties so that it is translated into
action.
About Green Capacity
Our History
Green Capacity received its USA EIN number on 17 March 2010, its
domestic non-profit corporation entity number from the state of
Pennsylvania on 26 April 2010, and its USA Federal tax exempt status
from the Internal Revenue Commission on 25 June 2010.
Green Capacity was formed in large part to support the efforts of
the Papua New Guinea (PNG)-based Papua New Guinea Institute of
Biological Research (PNGIBR) (www.pngibr.org). Two of our founding
board members (Drs. Debra Wright and Andrew Mack) have worked in PNG
since 1987, conducting research and training PNG biologists and
conservationists. They have led annual month-long training courses
for up to 30 university students and conservation/biology
professionals since 1996 in field techniques, project design, data
analysis, and report write-up (over 360 individuals trained to
date), have mentored 24 PNG Honours degree students in collaboration
with the University of PNG, and have helped to obtain overseas
Masters scholarships for 17 Papua New Guinean biologists. They
founded and were co-directors of the PNG Program office for a large
international conservation organization from 1999 through 2007. When
this international body decided to stop training efforts they joined
their former students in creating PNGIBR as an independent PNG-based
non-profit. Our third founding board member (Dr. Patrick Osbourne)
was Head of the University of Papua New Guinea Biology Department
before moving to the US to become a professor at the University of
Missouri and Executive Director of the Whitney R. Harris World
Ecology Center. He has been a great supporter of higher education in
PNG, and five of PNGIBR's staff and students have been mentored by
him at the University of Missouri while working on their Masters
degrees.
Our Vision is to be a facilitator and driving
force behind biological research and education in developing
nations, especially PNG, so that people have the knowledge and
skills they need to ensure a biologically sustainable and diverse
future in their own countries.
Our Mission is to resolve conservation challenges
by nurturing biology and conservation professionals in
underdeveloped nations through training, mentoring and financial
subsidy. Green Capacity also helps to build baseline biological
knowledge in underdeveloped nations by conducting and supporting
biological research in partnership with national scientists.
Our Purpose
Green Capacity works to build human and intellectual capital for
a biologically sustainable future by working with the international
community. Our target nation is Papua New Guinea, characterized by
four criteria: 1) high biodiversity, 2) underdeveloped national
scientific community, 3) underdeveloped local educational
infrastructure for building scientific capacity, and 4) poorly-known
and under-studied biota and ecosystems.
Green Capacity works to correct target nation needs by conducting
and supporting scientific research relating to biodiversity,
ecosystems and threatened species in partnership with national
scientists, and by building indigenous scientific infrastructure
through direct educational programs.
Educational programs include holding courses in target nations and
sponsoring students to attend classes overseas that they could not
attend at their home universities. Courses may be short specific
workshops, field courses, semester long classes or degree programs.
We also recognize that mature scientists best develop through a
process of mentoring. Young scientists need to work with senior
scientists who will guide them in the field or laboratory; they need
mentoring to take them through the entire process of conceptualizing
and designing research, executing the research, data analysis, and
communication of results, both to the scientific community and back
to local policymakers. Green Capacity supports young scientists from
target nations and partners them with accomplished scientists from
their own nation and with scientists from developed nations to
obtain intensive mentoring, particularly in the field and
laboratory. These mentorships grow a national scientific corps to
develop internally-driven high quality science and conservation
policy and provide research outcomes to improve conservation and
management efforts. Green Capacity also aids promising scientists to
attend advanced research and degree programs at top international
universities.
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