Noticias
Tinkunaku es una comunidad indígena Kolla, que habita en el departamento de Orán, en la provincia de Salta, y que ha configurado su modo de vida siguiendo los flujos de la naturaleza. Tiene como entorno a la ecorregión de Las Yungas, la cual alberga cerca del 50% de la biodiversidad de Argentina. Sus integrantes viven de la agricultura y la ganadería de subsistencia que practican en trashumancia, en torno a los “ayllus” de San Andrés, Los Naranjos, El Angosto de Paraní y Río Blanquito, que conforman su territorio.
El pastoreo trashumante es una práctica ganadera ancestral de acompañamiento y cuidado. Implica...
Finding innovative solutions for achieving a sustainable balance between agricultural and forestry goals, while halting deforestation, were top of the agenda at a recent gathering of conservation and farming experts in the Italian capital Rome.
During the 27th Session of the Committee on Forestry (COFO), held from 22-26 July, representatives from Indonesia, Peru, Uganda, Japan and the European Union (EU), together with experts of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), and stakeholders gathered for the 9th World Forest Week (WFW) side event “Greening synergies Innovative solutions to halt deforestation through sustainable agricultural supply chains and financial enablers”.
The...
Para Panamá, involucrar y consultar a los Pueblos Indígenas en la protección forestal es clave para lograr resultados en materia de clima y conservación. La importancia de su participación es tan reconocida que el país ha consagrado estos derechos en su legislación.
El proceso de Consentimiento Libre, Previo e Informado (CLPI)Consultas y consentimiento libre, previo e informado (FPIC) | OHCHR de los Pueblos Indígenas, como requisito esencial para cualquier actividad que afecte sus tierras ancestrales, territorios y recursos naturales, fue regulado en la legislación panameña en 2016.
Esta normativa establece la consulta y el CLPI de los Pueblos Indígenas cuando se vayan...
Forest-rich Democratic Republic of Congo knows that ensuring the rights of Indigenous Peoples is vital for the country’s conservation of forests and other natural resources.
The Democratic Republic of Congo which has more than 137 million hectares of lush forests - representing 58 percent of its land surface and essential for global biodiversity - adopted a law in 2022 to protect and promote the rights of Indigenous Peoples.
This law guarantees certain rights of Indigenous Peoples within the framework of REDD+ (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation in developing countries). In addition, there are also progressive legal provisions in the country...
Since Since 2022, the PROMIRE project (Promoting Deforestation-Free Cocoa Production to Reduce Emissions) has enabled Côte d'Ivoire to contribute to the fight against deforestation and forest degradation. The project aims both to support the country in finalizing the development and operationalization of REDD+ tools and to implement direct actions at the jurisdictional level to reduce the impacts of cocoa production on the forest in three regions: La Mé, Agneby Tiassa, and Sud-Comoé. Cocoa production in Côte d'Ivoire is crucial for economic, social, and environmental reasons. Economically, Côte d'Ivoire is the world's leading exporter of cocoa. The sector employs almost a...