Forest and land tenure rights are vital tools against land grabbing – but many Indigenous peoples and local communities still lack them.
From seed saving to non-linear conceptions of time, ancient Indigenous knowledge continues to transform landscapes and livelihoods today.
In the ‘Serengeti of Southeast Asia’, the Prey Lang smartphone app helps Indigenous communities in Cambodia expose and record illegal logging.
In West Kalimantan, villagers try to combine benefits of oil palm and forest conservation
White Mountain Future Search Conference unites parties to restore Maasai lands
The Bam-e-Dunya network connects partners in four Silk Road countries for sustainable mountain development.
By Lai Sanders, Rights and Resources Initiative This article was originally published at Intercontinental Cry. The evidence is clear: Indigenous Peoples and local communities have long been the backbone of the world’s environmental protection efforts, safeguarding what remains of our planet’s precious forests and natural resources despite mounting threats to their lands and their lives. […]
Increases in incomes, assets and education; decreases in deforestation
Land-dependent groups have a vested interest in success
And six tips for how to invest best