Works

Welcome to our digital archive. Please feel free to browse, or use our search engine to refine your exploration. If you have questions or comments, or if you're interested in re-printing an article, or requisitioning Conservation Visions Inc. to undertake more work, please don't hesitate to contact us!

Shane Mahoney Conservation Visions


Shane Mahoney Conservation Visions

Search Complete Library

Select a Type of work and/or Topic and click Apply to search our complete Works library.

The Secrets of Leadership

Author(s): 
Shane P. Mahoney

Early conservation pioneers succeeded because they understood how to convey the importance of their ideals to the public. However the conservation movement has to a large extent moved away from an agenda of trying to convince society of its social, cultural, and economic value. We no longer strive for the hearts of our nations’ publics. The conservation community has replaced this with an emphasis on membership rosters and obtaining political influence, both often emphasizing specific issues that can hardly be viewed as being of the greatest public value or concern.

Pursuit of the Common Good

Author(s): 
Shane P. Mahoney

In the area of natural history, Theodore Roosevelt was beyond question the most learned of American presidents (with the possible exception of Thomas Jefferson), and with respect to enacting policies for the protection of wildlife and their habitats, he remains indisputably the greatest.

A Third Revolution

Author(s): 
Shane P. Mahoney

A third revolution of wildlife conservation must occur or society will watch the miracle of wildlife recovery die. This third revolution must engender a massive mobilization of intellect and passion for the cause, but it must begin with an all-out effort to bring conservation history to the citizenry of Canada and the USA. In the absence of this, all other efforts will fail. 

Pages


Latest Works

A Leap of Faith for Hunting

Public Disclosure or Public Death - Part Three

In this third and final essay in his series on the importance of public dialogue, Shane Mahoney suggests that a powerful wind of change is sweeping across the conservation landscape. He argues that for the 21st century, building a formidable inclusive coalition is the only way to conserve wildlife and to maintain hunting as a vital force in our society. Building such a coalition will require bold new leadership that engages with the general public and reaches across the conservation aisle.

The Power of a Word

Author(s): 
Shane Mahoney

The term "Trophy Hunter" along with other terms and there impact on wildlife conservation.

Hunting: America's Economic Colossus

Conservation is not free. Someone must pay the bills.
Author(s): 
Shane Mahoney

"Unless we practice conservation, those who come after us will have to pay the price of misery, degradation, and failure for the progress and prosperity of our day." - Gifford Pinchot, Cheif of US Forest Service, and 28th Fovernor of Pennsylvania