Biographie
Dr Sahil Nijhawan is an interdisciplinary conservation anthropologist who has worked on human-wildlife relations across Latin America, Southern Africa and India. For the past decade, he has lived and worked alongside the Idu Mishmi people of Northeast India - a journey that began with his doctoral research in 2012 on socio-cultural relations between the Idu and tigers. He is part of several Indigenous-led teams working on rights-based bio-cultural conservation, which includes decolonised research, storytelling curriculum for Indigenous knowledge transfer, wildlife recovery in ICCAs, and shamanic knowledge preservation.
Intervient à
Dialogue: What is the role of humans in a more-than-human world?
oct 09 2025 (17:30 - 18:30)
Room: Reimagining Conservation
Centring relationships and kin-building in global conservation partnerships
oct 10 2025 (13:00 - 14:00)
Room: Nature Positive Pavilion
Power in Data
oct 11 2025 (14:00 - 16:00)
Room: Reimagining Conservation
Funding justice … justly: Shifting power and practice in conservation philanthropy
oct 12 2025 (17:30 - 19:00)
Room: Reimagining Conservation