Title 22 › Chapter 32— FOREIGN ASSISTANCE › Subchapter I— INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT › Part I— Declaration of Policy; Development Assistance Authorizations › § 2151q
The President and the U.S. development agency must help other countries protect plants, animals, and their homes. The law allows aid under the agency’s programs even if another rule (section 2420) would normally stop it. Help must focus on protecting habitats, limiting pollution, controlling hunting and trade in endangered species, and supporting programs to save plants and animals. Special effort should go to creating and keeping wildlife sanctuaries, reserves, and parks; stopping poaching; and finding, studying, and listing species, especially in tropical areas. For fiscal year 1987, at least $2,500,000 must be set aside for new projects under this rule, and ongoing projects should be continued and increased when possible. Each country plan from the Agency for International Development must say what is needed to save biodiversity and how the agency’s plans meet those needs. Projects should involve local people and, when possible, be run by private or nonprofit groups. The Agency’s head must work with international groups, follow the World Conservation Strategy, train and advise partner countries, help identify ecosystems worth protecting, cooperate with other U.S. agencies, review and fix agency rules that harm biodiversity and report to Congress within a year after October 24, 1986, include biodiversity information in environmental profiles, refuse aid that would damage parks or introduce invasive species, and put a separate report on implementation in the agency’s annual report.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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22 U.S.C. § 2151q
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60