Résultats de la recherche | Land Portal

Résultats de la recherche

Showing items 1 through 9 of 37.
  1. Library Resource

    State of Rights and Resources 2010-2011

    Rapports et recherches
    Global

    If 2009 was the end of the hinterland and the beginning of a new globalized forest era, 2010 was a year of pushback. Worldwide, the news was full of reports of forest communities and Indigenous Peoples pushing back at land grabs and shaping policy at the national and global levels, and of governments countering and trying to contain community rights. Some governments and private investors accepted or even embraced the new players at the table and began to promote fairer business and conservation models.

  2. Library Resource
    Rapports et recherches
    Global

    NEW YORK (17 September, 2014)—US$1.64 billion, the funds pledged to date by three major multi-lateral initiatives at the United Nations and World Bank in preparing for the evolving REDD+ carbon market, would expand the demarcation, registration, and titling of rights of the local communities and Indigenous Peoples living on 450 million hectares, an area almost half the size of Europe, according to new research released by the Rights and Resources Initiative (RRI) and Tebtebba (Indigenous Peoples’ International Centre for Policy Research and Education).

  3. Library Resource
    Rapports et recherches
    mars, 2016
    Global

    Up to 2.5 billion people depend on indigenous and community lands, which make up over 50 percent of the land on the planet; they legally own just one-fifth. The remaining five billion hectares remain unprotected and vulnerable to land grabs from more powerful entities like governments and corporations.

  4. Library Resource

    An Updated Analysis Of Indigenous Peoples' and Local Communities' Contributions to Climate Change Mitigation

    Rapports et recherches
    novembre, 2016
    Global

    The study’s findings offer the most compelling quantitative evidence to date of the unparalleled role that forest peoples have to play in climate change mitigation, reinforcing the critical importance of collective tenure security for the sustainable use and protection of the world’s tropical forests and the carbon they sequester.

  5. Library Resource

    The urgency of securing community land rights in a turbulent world

    Rapports et recherches
    février, 2017
    Kenya, République démocratique du Congo, Sénégal, Brésil, Colombie, Pérou, Chine, Indonésie, Inde

    Amid the realities of major political turbulence, there was growing recognition in 2016 that the land rights of Indigenous Peoples and local communities are key to ensuring peace and prosperity, economic development, sound investment, and climate change mitigation and adaptation. Despite equivocation by governments, a critical mass of influential investors and companies now recognize the market rationale for respecting community land rights.

  6. Library Resource
    Tenure and Investment in Africa cover image
    Rapports et recherches
    février, 2017
    Afrique, Kenya, Cameroun, Burkina Faso, Libéria, Mali, Sénégal

    This synthesis of our findings from an investigation of tenure risk in East, West, and Southern Africa, shows that a majority of tenure disputes are caused by the displacement of local peoples, indicating that companies and investors are not doing enough to understand competing claims to the land they acquire or lease. This failure in diligence is particularly noteworthy given that a majority of the disputes analyzed had materially significant impacts: indeed, a higher proportion of projects in Africa are financially impacted by tenure dispute than any other region in the world. 

  7. Library Resource

    A Comparative Analysis of National Laws and Regulations Concerning Women's Rights to Community Forests

    Documents de politique et mémoires
    mai, 2017
    Afrique, Asie

    Up to 2.5 billion people hold and use the world’s community lands, yet the tenure rights of women—who comprise more than half the population of the world’s Indigenous Peoples and local communities—are seldom acknowledged or protected by national laws.

  8. Library Resource

    Brief for the Rights and Resources Initiative

    Rapports et recherches
    décembre, 2010
    Mozambique

    After a number of constitutional amendments in 1990 had introduced the need to revise the legal framework for land and natural resources1, the government of Mozambique embarked upon a rather piecemeal process to develop a new policy and institutional framework for natural resource management. The main pillars of this framework consist of various pieces of legislation dealing with specific natural resources, such as the Land Law, the Forestry & Wildlife Law, the Mining Law and their related regulations and annexes.

  9. Library Resource

    Status and Recommendations

    Documents de politique et mémoires
    avril, 2016
    Global

    This brief presents a review of 161 Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs) submitted on behalf of 188 countries3 for COP 21 to determine the extent to which Parties made clear commitments to strengthen or expand the tenure and natural resource management rights of IP/LCs as part of their climate change mitigation plans or associated adaptation actions.4 Of the 161 INDCs submitted, 131 are from countries with tropical and subtropical forests.

  10. Library Resource

    Insights from Oil Palm in Indonesia

    Rapports et recherches
    avril, 2017
    Global, Asie

    The oil palm boom in Indonesia continues to be a major driver of land acquisitions in remaining tropical forest frontiers, drawing on a wide range of actors into its production, and transforming both rural landscapes and livelihoods in the process. The growing body of research and evidence on the social and economic effects of oil palm expansion does not adequately consider the gender dimensions of the oil palm boom, thereby lacking a balanced view of both women’s and men’s experiences.

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