About Us

At MSWC, we believe that effective wildlife conservation requires more than passion. It calls for strong leadership, sound financial management, organizational skills, and the ability to navigate complex challenges at the grassroots level. That’s where we come in.

The Leadership and Management Program (LAMP) that we support is designed to equip community-based conservation practitioners with the practical tools they need to lead, manage, and conserve more effectively. Grounded in the realities of wildlife communities and delivered in local languages, LAMP turns commitment into tangible impact.

Many leaders and staff of wildlife conservancies—as well as the philanthropies that support them—come from backgrounds in zoology or environmental science. Few, however, have formal training in business or management. Yet community-led wildlife conservancies often face some of the most complex leadership and operational challenges in the field.

MSWC is proud to have supported the first LAMP training in northern Kenya dedicated exclusively to local women. These women—many of whom are leaders of grassroots women’s associations—come from predominantly Maasai pastoralist communities. The LAMP curriculum was designed with them in mind, using visual and practical approaches to teach essential leadership and management skills. This makes the program accessible to those with limited formal education or literacy.

Through programs like LAMP, MSWC is helping to build a new generation of conservation leaders—locally rooted, equipped for impact, and ready to protect wildlife for generations to come.

Read more about what our trainees are saying.

Guy Pfeffermann
Patrick Klemz

Advisory Board

Alan Gelb

Senior Fellow,

Center for Global Development

Frank Lysy

Former Chief Economist & Director,

Economics and Policy Group, World Bank’s Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency

Irene Crowe

President and Founder,

Pettus-Crowe Foundation

Jagi Gakunju

Founder,

Wajee Nature Park; Director & Chairman, Africa Fund for Endangered Wildlife