FROM THE BACK COVER Our planet is witnessing the sixth mass extinction of species. We are trying to tackle this crisis almost on a war footing, with all the trappings and machinery of combat - fences, guns, protected areas, and a suite of top-down laws and policies. But we haven't been able to stop the bleeding. This book argues that we will not stanch the flow unless we are willing to change our fundamental attitude towards people - people who live in our last remaining natural areas, whose lives depend on these ecosystems, and who are most affected - negatively - by policies and actions designed to protect biodiversity. To conserve our natural ecosystems and species, we must gain the support of local people. Yet, this is more easily said than done. How does one engage with local communities and garner their support for conservation? Unlike protected areas, whose governance and management have been formalised worldwide, there are no clear-cut frameworks for community-based conservation, no universally accepted guidelines. This book is an attempt to fill that void. It should interest all who care about preserving the earth's wild species and ecosystems. This book is founded on two decades of experience working with local communities to conserve the high mountain habitats of the endangered snow leopard in various parts of Asia - the Himalayas, Altai, Tien Shan, Hindu Kush, Pamirs, and the Tibetan Plateau. Drawing from this wealth of experience, Dr. Charu Mishra and his colleagues at the Snow Leopard Trust distil eight principles of community-based conservation, discussing them with candor and pragmatism. These 'PARTNERS Principles' are a blend of the practical and the ethical. “I was struck by two aspects of this remarkable book. Firstly at its heart there is a deep love of both nature and humanity. The excitement, the joys and the challenges of community-based conservation shine out from its pages. Secondly, there is a refreshing honesty, a recognition of the doubts, problems, confusions and failures, and, crucially, a willingness to face these shortcomings and dilemmas, to try and learn from them. […] This book deserves to be widely read” – From the foreword by Professor Steve Redpath, University of Aberdeen