The program is organized around four core activities that will be implemented in overlapping phases over the life of the program. These are:
1. Knowledge building, including an initial review, synthesis and dissemination of current knowledge, and applied comparative research in a number of different field locations to help fill gaps in our knowledge;
2. Identification and development of diagnostic and decision support tools that will help us better understand the positive, negative or neutral relationships among natural resource conservation, natural resource governance and alleviation of rural poverty;
3. Cross-partner skill exchange to better enable planning, implementing and adaptively managing projects and programs in ways that maximize synergies between good governance, conservation and wealth creation;
4. Global dissemination of knowledge, tools, and best practices for promoting wealth creation of the rural poor, environmental governance and resource conservation.
To ensure that, over the 5-year life of the program, TransLinks develops a coherent, compelling and, most importantly, useful corpus of information about the value of, and approaches to, integrating Nature, Wealth and Power, TransLinks is structuring the work around two core issues – 1) payments for ecosystem services and 2) property rights and resource tenure.