1. Alan Robert Rabinowitz was an American zoologist who served as the president, CEO, and chief scientist at Panthera Corporation, a nonprofit conservation organization devoted to protecting the world's 40 wild cat species.

1. Alan Robert Rabinowitz was an American zoologist who served as the president, CEO, and chief scientist at Panthera Corporation, a nonprofit conservation organization devoted to protecting the world's 40 wild cat species.
Alan Rabinowitz was born to Shirley and Frank Rabinowitz in Brooklyn, New York, but moved to Queens, New York, soon afterward.
Unable to communicate with his peers and teachers, Rabinowitz became interested in wildlife, with which he could communicate.
Later, Alan Rabinowitz regularly recalled how in childhood he became interested in wildlife conservation.
In 2008, the video of Alan Rabinowitz telling this story on The Colbert Report went viral.
Alan Rabinowitz served as a spokesperson for the Stuttering Foundation.
In 1974, Alan Rabinowitz received his bachelor's degree in biology and chemistry from Western Maryland College in Westminster, Maryland.
Alan Rabinowitz initiated Panthera's Tiger Corridor Initiative, an effort to identify and protect the world's last remaining large interconnected tiger landscapes, with a primary focus on the remote and rugged Indo-Himalayan region of Asia.
In November 2017, Alan Rabinowitz stepped down as president and CEO to serve as the chief scientist of Panthera, where he oversaw the organization's range-wide conservation programs focused on tigers, lions, jaguars, and snow leopards and additional projects devoted to the protection of cougars, cheetahs, and leopards.
Alan Rabinowitz died on August 5,2018, from the progression of his cancer.