NEWSLETTERS

SOURCE: | June 11, 2026 | Johnmary Luwaga   Conservation Through Public Health (CTPH) has handed over equipment worth Shs113 million to Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA) to strengthen health monitoring for mountain gorillas, tourists, and rangers at Bwindi Impenetrable National Park amid Uganda’s Ebola outbreak. Handing over the donation, Dr
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SOURCE: | 20 Feb 2026 Can wildlife tourism balance conservation, land rights and profit? Millions travel to Kenya and Tanzania each year to witness the Great Migration, but growing tourism infrastructure is raising concerns. Conservationists and community leaders warn that development is disrupting wildlife corridors and impacting Maasai land rights.
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https://youtu.be/NaJvboCTCEY
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SOURCE: |Meera Dattani | May 7, 2026 The face and voice of Sir David Attenborough has been beamed into living rooms around the world for eight decades on the BBC. From presenting Zoo Quest in 1954 to his current series Secret Garden, his curiosity for the natural world is limitless.
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|September 30, 2025 | By Rita Kalendera     Rhoda Kalema was bold, ambitious and led by example, working tirelessly to transform the lives of ordinary women, inspiring many to pursue higher education and take up leadership roles. Born in 1929, Rhoda Nakibuuka Nsibirwa Kalema, was one of Uganda’s most
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12:09 • Source: CNN Conservationist and author Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka speaks with CNN’s Larry Madowo at Global Perspectives on Africa. Find full Interview at: Global Perspectives: Can tourism and conservation align?
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https://youtu.be/QNKH1eeJoI0    
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Dr Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka and Conservation Through Public Health are officially #ElevatePrize finalists! Now in its 6th year, the Elevate Prize celebrates changemakers who are maximising impact and working to #MakeGoodFamous. We are excited that our work to improve the health of people and #MountainGorillas through the #OneHealth approach is being
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  | Sheree Bega | 27 October 2025 Threatened: Mountain gorillas will come under increasing stress as global temperatures increase. Photo: Robert Haasmann Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka still remembers the day in 1999 that her work — and her worldview — shifted. As Uganda’s first wildlife vet, and the only veterinary expert with
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