Nature Clubs, WWF-India's pioneering conservation programme, was started in 1976 to inculcate an appreciation for nature among young people through a participatory approach.
A nature club is a group of young people, generating effective awareness through a collective effort of the members. Nature Clubs are initiatives towards pitching conservation efforts at societal level, which would have direct bearings upon decisions that we make as individuals and members of the society, in the interest of an environment of which we all form different parts.
WWF-India works through a network of urban and rural educational institutions within 26 States, through its Divisional and Field Offices, reaching out to nature lovers and conservation enthusiasts all over the country, in all the bio-geographic zones of India. Some of these regions fall under priority landscapes, biodiversity hotspots and fragile ecosystem categories.
Nature Clubs are now taking on a deeper and greater mandate, constantly transcending formal and non-formal education sectors, capacity-building, awareness generation through community action work, with the inclusion of public and private-sector organisations, encompassing a cross section of interests, stakeholders and vantage points for directing conservation action.
There are three types of Nature Clubs each not very distinct from one another, which cater to specific constituencies. They all interact and complement each other's initiatives within their shared socio-ecological context.