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Anchorage, Alaska
30th September – 6th October
 2005



Wilderness,
Wildlands
and People:
A Partnership
for the Planet

 



"There are no words that can tell the hidden spirit of the wilderness, that can reveal its melancholy and its charm"

Theodore Roosevelt,
President of the United States 1901-1909
 
Accomplishments

WWC History:
7th South Africa
6th India
5th Norway
4th USA
3rd Scotland
2nd Australia
1st South Africa

Sponsorship Opportunities

Registration

Congress Announcement
826KB PDF
 





Proceedings from the
7th World Wilderness Congress
Now Available

 



Accomplishments of the 3rd World Wilderness Congress
 
3rd WORLD WILDERNESS CONGRESS - Held in October, 1983 in Inverness and Findhorn, Scotland, with 600 delegates from 25 countries. Proceedings: Wilderness: The Way Ahead, edited by Martin and Inglis, published by Findhorn & Lorian Press, 1984.

Mrs. Thatcher's government (through the Secretary of State for Scotland, George Younger) formally announced for the first time their ratification of the World Heritage Convention. Congress delegates recommended that the Cairngorm Plateau in Scotland be included on the Register.

Prompted formation of the Wilderness Associazione Italiana (Italian Wilderness Association), which is successfully establishing the wilderness concept and working for wilderness legislation in Italy.

Barry Cohen (Minister of Environment, Australia) reported on developments in Australia since the 2nd WWC, with special reference to his government not allowing the Tasmanian dams to proceed, thereby protecting the Southwest Tasmanian Wilderness.

Contemporary and historical nature art from around the world complemented the working sessions, in which concerned activists from (pictured) India, the Navajo Nation and elsewhere met with resource developers and policymakers.

Continued to emphasize the need for a cultural and ethical dimension to conservation planning and policy making. (This concept has finally been acknowledged in the scientific arena by formation of a new commission within the World Conservation Union.)

Professor C.A. Meier (Switzerland), colleague and friend of the late Carl Gustav Jung, made the first address to an international conservation conference by a leading psychologist.
Prompted establishment of the Wilderness Action Group in South Africa to advocate for wilderness legislation.

The published proceedings were formally recognized by the British Council as one of the exemplary books published in the United Kingdom in 1984.

 
 

"The civilized people have lost the aptitude of stillness, and must take lessons in silence from the wild."   Isak Dinesen
 

 
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