Terms of Use

LEGAL DISCLOSURE AND TERMS OF USE FOR USER-GENERATED CONTENT

The Nature Conservancy owns and operates the website Natural Resource Navigator (www.naturalresourcenavigator.org). The purpose of the Natural Resource Navigator is to advance the distribution and use of natural resource information and facilitate climate smart decision making.

Users of Natural Resource Navigator are subject to the Terms of Use of The Nature Conservancy websites (Primary Terms of Use) that can be found at http://www.nature.org/about-us/governance/terms-of-use/ except to the extent that additional terms are provided here for the distribution and use of conservation data. Terms used here have the same definition as those contained in the Primary Terms of Use.

LICENSE OF USER-GENERATED CONTENT FROM NATURAL RESOURCE NAVIGATOR POST CONTRIBUTORS

Those individuals providing user-generated content onto Natural Resource Navigator through Share Your Story contributions REPRESENT, WARRANT AND GUARANTEE they have the right to license User-Generated Content (UGC) to the Conservancy for use of this Website and agree to the terms of the License found on Creative Commons at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/legalcode. UGC Providers shall defend and hold harmless the Conservancy against any claims from third parties arising out of the UGC they provide to the Conservancy.

LICENSE TO USE CONTENT
Title to the Content on Natural Resource Navigator remains with The Nature Conservancy except where there is User-Generated Content on Coastal Resilience Posts or a third-party owner is identified on Natural Resource Navigator, such as journal articles, presentations, or datasets within the mapping tool, hosted under another domain (maps.coastalresilience.org/nyadaptation). License of content used varies by Content owner:

Content owned by The Nature Conservancy. Use of Content on Natural Resource Navigator is permitted by Users under the terms of the Creative Commons license for non-commercial purposes on the condition it is attributed to the Content owner, specifically The Nature Conservancy. The full terms of the License can be found on Creative Commons at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/legalcode.

Content owned by Third-Parties: Use of Third-Party Owned Content on Natural Resource Navigator is not permitted by Users besides reviewing online, including but not limited to copying, distribution, publication, transfer or sale, unless by terms of the individual license agreement for a dataset.

User-Generated Content: Use of Content on Natural Resource Navigator is permitted by Users under the terms of the Creative Commons license for non-commercial purposes on the condition it is attributed to the Content owner. The full terms of the License can be found on Creative Commons at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/legalcode.

Users agree to terms of the License and the Terms of Use. Please read each carefully to fully understand your obligations and rights.

Governance

The Nature Conservancy is governed as a single, tax-exempt 501(c) (3) organization by a worldwide, volunteer Board of Directors and is managed from its worldwide office in Arlington, Virginia USA. Because the Conservancy is organized as a single organization rather than as separate local legal entities, ultimate responsibility for the operation of The Nature Conservancy lies with its Board of Directors. Although the Board of Directors cannot delegate its broad legal and fiduciary responsibilities, it does delegate responsibility for day-to-day operations to the president and chief executive officer, who in turn delegates responsibilities to his or her executive team.

To achieve the Conservancy’s place-based mission, the Board of Directors has established chapters of The Nature Conservancy at the state and country level. Each state and country program is run by a director who manages the program’s annual plan and budget in support of the Conservancy’s mission and goals. State and country directors are managed through clear reporting channels back to the president and, through the president’s office, to the Board of Directors. All U.S. state and several country programs are advised and assisted by volunteer Boards of Trustees. The Boards of Trustees advise chapters on strategic issues, assist in setting goals and, importantly, subject the chapter’s work to additional critical thinking.

More information on The Nature Conservancy can be found at www.nature.org