Michael (Mike) HOFFMANN

Biography

Mike Hoffmann, a South African national, is currently based at the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) where he heads up the organization’s cross-cutting conservation programmes. He has worked in intergovernmental (IUCN), non-governmental (Conservation International, WCMC and ZSL) and academic sectors (the University of Pretoria’s Mammal Research Institute and Oxford University’s Wildlife Conservation Research Unit) in South Africa, the US and the UK. He has been involved in helping launch or support several major conservation initiatives, including the IUCN Red List and IUCN Green Status of Species, Key Biodiversity Areas, the Alliance for Zero Extinction, EDGE, SMART, the biodiversity hotspots concept, the Universal Ranger Support Alliance and more. He is the co-editor of the 6-volume Mammals of Africa and holds one of the world’s most comprehensive private libraries on African mammals

 

Speaking at

The Green Status Index: measuring progress towards species recovery and the impact of conservation actions

Oct 09 2025 (14:00 - 14:40)

Room: Learning Zone Pavilion: Publications Hub
The Green Status Index: measuring progress towards species recovery and the impact of conservation actions
Biodiversity Hotspots updated: a 25-year re-evaluation [Event starts at 1:30pm]

Oct 11 2025 (14:00 - 15:00)

Room: IUCN Programme 2026-2029 Pavilion - R2
Biodiversity Hotspots updated: a 25-year re-evaluation [Event starts at 1:30pm]
Getting hands-on with the IUCN Green Status of Species recovery assessment

Oct 12 2025 (14:30 - 15:30)

Room: Learning Zone Pavilion: Tools for Nature
Getting hands-on with the IUCN Green Status of Species recovery assessment
Revolutionising indicators of wildlife use and trade through big data from online and social platforms [Event ends at 4:30pm]

Oct 12 2025 (15:00 - 16:00)

Room: IUCN Programme 2026-2029 Pavilion - R1
Revolutionising indicators of wildlife use and trade through big data from online and social platforms [Event ends at 4:30pm]
Scaling conflict-sensitive conservation to benefit nature, people and peace: Understanding the challenges

Oct 13 2025 (13:00 - 14:00)

Room: IUCN Commissions Knowledge Hub
Scaling conflict-sensitive conservation to benefit nature, people and peace: Understanding the challenges