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HISTORY The Foundation was established as an incorporated body in 1966 after distinguished Australian scientist Sir Francis Radcliffe was inspired by a 1963 memo from the Duke Of Edinburgh to establish a national conservation body. Sir Garfield Barwick , Chief Justice of the High Court , was appointed ACF's first President. CAMPAIGNS & PROGRAMS ACF covers a wide range of environmental and sustainability issues, including: protected areas, sustainable agriculture and land management, climate change and energy, nuclear issues, sustainable consumption, forests, oceans, sustainable cities, corporate environmental responsibility, environmental law reform, healthy rivers and water management, sustainable consumption, and ecologically sustainable development in northern Australia, East Timor and Papua New Guinea. Campaigns and programs are selected predominantly for their capacity to contribute to reforms of national significance. This means that ACF tends not to become directly involved in local environmental issues, except where action on these contributes to achieving broader goals, such as highlighting examples of national problems or generating examples of solutions with larger potential. The organisation is acutely aware of its limited resources and strives to apply these strategically. This said, ACF is often called upon to comment on local issues and will often lend local environmental groups a helping hand. More often than not, ACF will work closely with other environmental groups - large or small - on the understanding that more can be achieved through co-operation. The Peter Rawlinson Award has been established by the ACF consisting of $3000 and a plaque made to individuals who have made an outstanding voluntary contribution to the Australian environment. The award is announced on June 5, World Environment Day each year. It commemorates Dr Peter Rawlinson’s contribution as an environmental campaigner and researcher. Rawlinson was an ACF Treasurer and Vice President and a biologist and conservationist who died while doing field work in Indonesia in 1991. FUNDING Over ninety percent of ACF's funding is received from its members and supporters, with the small remainder derived from government grants and from selected companies. ORGANIZATION ACF is governed by a thirty-nine member Council of Representatives elected every three years by the organization's membership. The Council meets regularly to determine organizational policy and priorities. ACF's democratic structure helps to ensure that its sixty-odd staff keep in touch with Australia's diverse grassroots environmental movement, while maintaining a high degree of professionalism and a strategic approach to sustainability issues of national significance. Council elects an Executive which meets more frequently to debate and decide on organizational matters in more detail. Council also appoints a voluntary President who represents ACF at a high level and who chairs Council meetings. In 2005 Ian Lowe, distinguished Australian scientist and Emeritus Professor of Science, Technology and Society at Griffith University, was appointed President. NEWSLETTER
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