The World Wide Fund For Nature is the world's largest and most experienced independent conservation organization, with around 5 million supporters and a global network of 27 National Organizations, 5 Associates, and 21 Programme Offices.
The Environment in Rural Development: responding to UK environmental priorities through rural development measures
Vicki Swales, Martin Farmer, Clunie Keenleyside, et al., November 2005Appendix 1: State of the Environment in England - problems and trends
November 2005Appendix 3: Environmental priorities in UK rural development programmes - Case Studies
November 2005Europe's Living Countryside Project: Bulgarian Report - Executive Summary
Yanka Kazakova, October 2005The Spain National Report
G. Beaufoy, S. Jennings, E. Hernandez, et al., October 2005Areas vulnerable to acute oil pollution in the Norwegian Barents Sea
Odd Willy Brude, June 2005Petroleum-free zones in the Barents Sea
Sandra Marthinsen (translator), June 2005Europe's Living Countryside: The Netherlands
Arjan Berkhuysen, May 2005Environmental Priorities in UK Rural Development Programmes
Vicki Swales, Janet Dwyer, Martin Farmer, May 2005The Big Four - a WWF update on Greenland's efforts with regard to species conservation and nature protection
Thor Hjarsen (consultant), April 2005Two Degrees Is Too Much! A Snapshot of Global Warming in the Arctic
January 2005Summary: The Barents Sea Cod - Last of the large cod stocks
May 2004No Place to Hide: Effects of Climate Change on Protected Areas
August 2003The Barents Sea - A sea of opportunities...and threats
April 2003Polar Bears at Risk
April 2002The Status of Natural Resources on the High-Seas
January 2001Global Warming and Terrestrial Biodiversity
Jay R. Malcolm, Adam Markham, August 2000Climate Change and Nuclear Power
April 2000Living Planet Report 2000
April 2000Global Warming: The Oceans in Peril
June 1999