What: Cynthia Moses: Environmental Education in the DRC with the
International Conservation and Education Fund

When: Tuesday, October 29th at 12 noon

Where: The Allen Center, CSE 203

Join us for this weeks Change talk by Cynthia Moses on here work with the
International Conservation and Education Fund (INCEF) an NGO working in the
Democratic Republic of Congo promoting the health and wellbeing of human
and wildlife populations through local video disseminations.

Abstract

INCEF was founded on 3 principles:  1) The revolutionary change in
communications technology in recent years and the fact that the barriers to
production and dissemination – technical, physical, financial – have either
disappeared or have been greatly reduced;  2) using this technology
successfully to create actual change is not likely to occur unless people
profoundly understand the risk to their own health and well-being and also
have a sense of what they can actually do themselves to prevent trouble.
 We have created a production style that uses first-person testimony  and
relies on productions in local languages and the voices of local people;
and 3) dissemination – how the films are shown.  In the case of INCEF,
films are taken into the field by teams of two trained educators who
measure impact by quantity of viewers, quality of responses before and
after each film, and through anecdotal reactions.  This methodology has
shown positive results in challenges throughout Republic of Congo and
Democratic Republic of Congo on issues ranging from conservation and to
basic health issues, to the complexities of understanding how zoonotic
diseases are spread and the repercussions of shifting climates.

About the Speaker

Cynthia Moses, founder of Moses Films Ltd., has been making award-winning
wildlife and conservation films for nearly two decades. Her work has aired
on National Geographic, PBS, the Discovery Channel, NBC,  as well as
internationally. Almost a decade after it was produced, New Chimpanzees
(1995) is still considered the definitive film on chimpanzee cultural
traditions. Odzala: Islands in the Forest (1999) was essential in
convincing the government of the Republic of Congo to expand that park to
four times its original size. Living with Gorillas (2000) was the first
film to document the behavior of Western Lowland Gorillas. She was part of
the team that produced the Emmy nominated Discover Magazine (1995-1999)
science series. Her two-hour special Gorillas: Primal Contact (2003) is the
first film to cover all three recognized subspecies of gorillas.

Her work in Africa and around the world has motivated her to become more
involved in conservation serving as a consultant for the Bushmeat Crisis
Task Force, producing several short films for The Wildlife Conservation
Society on conservation issues in central Africa, and more recently as
founder of the International Conservation and Education Fund whose mission
is to integrate conservation and health issues through grassroots outreach
education.
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