JobMail
With JobMail CIPRA International informs you at irregular intervals about vacancies in organizations and institutions, which work in the field of protection and sustainable development in the Alps. JobMail does not consider any specific language, it is sent via eMail and free of charge. Subscribe here!
Current job offers:
Downloads
- Praktikum bei CIPRA International, ab Oktober 2025 (1.4 MB)
- Internship 2025 @ ALPARC (Deadline 30.05.2025)_en.pdf (256.6 KB)
- Stage 2025 @ ALPARC (Deadline 30.05.2025)_fr.pdf (260.3 KB)
- Ausschreibung Finanzvorstand @ POW Germany e.V..pdf (268.5 KB)
- Praktikum Kommunikation @ pro alps (Deadline 31.05.2025).pdf (216.5 KB)
- Projektleitung Politische Arbeit @pronatura (Deadline 01.06.2025).pdf (46.4 KB)
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News from the Alps
CIPRA Internationale Alpenschutzkommission | Schaan, LI
Joint action on climate change
The forests of the Alps will only be able to cope with climate change if the findings from all the various specialist fields are pooled together. And that requires new forms of co-operation and communication.

CIPRA Internationale Alpenschutzkommission | Schaan, LI
Knowing how to shape the climate
Climate protection is possible. It's just that lots of people don't know how to go about it. CIPRA is demonstrating how we can protect the climate and save money at the same time. The whole idea is being trialled in two pilot regions in the Alps

CIPRA Internationale Alpenschutzkommission | Schaan, LI
Young, climate-conscious, and thirsting for action
Young people from five Alpine nations campaigned as part of the My Clime-mate Project to make the Alps a carbon-neutral region. At the end of October they took stock - and forged new plans.

CIPRA Internationale Alpenschutzkommission | Schaan, LI
"We'll keep at it."
Virtually everyone was there. Idrija's festival hall was packed to the rafters, and the youth symphony orchestra summoned specially for the occasion was in full flow. There was plenty of drama, and the TV people were there, too. A murmur went through the 1,000-strong audience as they got to their feet and began clapping. Then a large burly man in a dark suit walked onto to the stage. Deep creases bracketed his laughing mouth like waterfalls, stretching up to his white temples. Bojan Sever, the major of the small Slovenian town in the alpine foothills, held aloft the certificate confirming their status as Alpine Town of the Year 2011. Cameras flashed and the applause redoubled. That was just over a year ago.