#LandConf2015
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Getting our Priorities Straight: Why Indigenous and Community Land Rights Matter in the Light of Global Challenges
Many of us have been raised with the idea that you do not take what does not belong to you. This is, however, not always so obvious. Every single day, especially in the developing world, people are driven off their land for the sake of foreign investments. In the last decade alone foreign investments have led to the acquisition of more than 81 million acres of land worldwide âan area the size of Portugal, with unspeakable consequences for many rural and forest dwellers across the world.This is caused by the widespread and enduring lack of clarity and recognition of indigenous and community land and resource rights. When land rights are weak or insecure Indigenous Peoples and local communities risk losing access to land and resources they heavily depend on. Unfortunately insecurity of land tenure is commonplace in the developing world. Today the ownership of roughly half of the rural forest and dry land areas of Africa, Asia and Latin America is contested, placing the lives and livelihoods of at least two billion people atrisk.
Securing and protecting that ownership is not only of great importance for social and economic development, but also for progress on human rights, food security, environmental conservation and confronting and adapting to climate change. This is due to the fact that land rights contribute to a diverse range of benefits and social values. As shown in a compiled report by the International Land Coalition (ILC), access to land rights is linked to food security, productivity, well-being and dignity, empowerment, gender equality and environmental protection. That means that securing indigenous and community land and resource rights is key in the face of global challenges, such as eradicating hunger and poverty, promoting gender equality and ensuring environmental protection. Moreover, as stated by Jenny Springer in a guest blog from the Rights and Resources Initiative (RRI), âexplicit inclusion of secure land rights for local communities and Indigenous Peoples is key to âleaving no one behindâ in global sustainable development goalsâ.
Photo Credit: Rights & Resources Initiative
Many organizations worldwide have come to acknowledge the need to join hands in securing indigenous and community land and resource rights. During the 2013 Interlaken Conference on Scaling-up Strategies to Secure Community Land and Resources Rights this has led to the development of The Global Call to Action on Indigenous and Community Land Rights. Guided by the ILC, RRI and Oxfam, the Global Call to Action has the goal âto double the area of land recognized as owned or controlled by indigenous peoples and local communities by 2020â. Building on the efforts of existing networks and organizations, this global network is set to facilitate greater collaboration and collective action around the world. Through these efforts change will happen by enabling and supporting the recognition, implementation, and upholding of indigenous and community land rights at the national level, which is where rights and tenure governance institutions are determined. Only then will we move forward, while leaving no one behind.
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To draw attention to, and move towards the stated goal of, the Global Call to Action, Oxfam, ILC and RRI are organizing a Policy Roundtable on âScaling up strategies to secure Indigenous and Community Land Rightsâ at the Annual World Bank Conference on Land and Poverty. At this invited session experiences from local communities and civil society organizations around the world are brought together to serve as an opportunity to build and expand collaborations, commitments and investments for strengthening indigenous and community land rights from local to global scales. The speakers, including Samuel Nguiffo, Richard Smith, Peter Veit, Jennifer Corpuz and Rachael Knight, will highlight the current challenges that undermine tenure security for indigenous and community land right and will identify concrete examples of positive change that should be supported and up-scaled.
The session will take place on Wednesday, March 25, from 1:00 pm to 2:30 pm in Washington DC. Click here for more information on the session. If you are not able to attend the session: donât worry. You can follow the Policy Roundtable live by clicking here.
 Other sessions at the World Bank Conference of your interest on indigenous and community land rights, are:
01-04: Identifying and dealing with under-performing land investment projects, Tuesday, 24 March 8:30am â 10:00am MC 4-800
02-02: Turning land rights commitments into practice in the sugar sector , Tuesday, 24 March 10:30am â 12:00pm MC 13-121Â
02-10:Â Building on community tenure to manage landscapes sustainably Tuesday, 24 March 10:30am â 12:00pm MC 7-100Â
03-07: Approaches to administering customary and community rights  Tuesday, 24 March 1:00pm â 2:30pm MC C1-200Â
04-05: Evaluating the impact of interventions to improve tenure, Tuesday, 24 March 2:45pm â 4:15pm MC C2-131Â
06-07: Legal mechanisms to improve land rights of forest dwellers, Wednesday, 25 March 8:30am â 10:00am MC C1-200Â
07-02: Leveraging climate change policies to promote local forest rights, Wednesday, 25 March 10:30am â 12:00pm MC 13-121Â
08-09: Research on communal lands and land conflict, Wednesday, 25 March 1:00pm â 2:30pm MC 7-100Â
09-05: Effectively strengthening indigenous rights, Wednesday, 25 March 2:45pm â 4:15pm MC C1-100Â
09-08: Land tenure issues in East Asia: Ensuring sustainability and traditional rights, Wednesday, 25 March 2:45pm â 4:15pm MC 6-100Â
12-04: Securing community rights: Legal and technology options, Thursday, 26 March 10:30am â 12:00pm MC 4-800Â
13-06: Mechanisms to secure forest and range lands, Thursday, 26 March 1:00pm â 2:30pm MC C1-100Â
14-05: Improving accountability for communities, Thursday, 26 March 2:45pm â 4:15pm MC C2-131
Maarten van Bijnen
Maarten is currently working on land grabbing issues with the Popular Campaigning Department at Oxfam Novib. Currently, pursuing his Masters at Radboud University, Maarten has a keen eye for design and visuals. In an alternate universe, he would be in Tanzania making films, but for now, he is here trying to figure out his thesis question at Oxfam Novib. You can also follow him on Tumblr.
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Getting Our Priorities Straight: Why Indigenous and Community Land Rights Matter in the Light of Global Challenges
Many of us have been raised with the idea that you do not take what does not belong to you. This is, however, not always so obvious. Every single day, especially in the developing world, people are driven off their land for the sake of foreign investments. In the last decade alone foreign investments have led to the acquisition of more than 81 million acres of land worldwide âan area the size of Portugal-, with unspeakable consequences for many rural and forest dwellers across the world. This is caused by the widespread and enduring lack of clarity and recognition of indigenous and community land and resource rights. When land rights are weak or insecure Indigenous Peoples and local communities risk losing access to land and resources they heavily depend on. Unfortunately insecurity of land tenure is commonplace in the developing world. Today the ownership of roughly half of the rural forest and dryland areas of Africa, Asia and Latin America is contested, placing the lives and livelihoods of at least two billion people at risk.
Securing and protecting that ownership is not only of great importance for social and economic development, but also for progress on human rights, food security, environmental conservation and confronting and adapting to climate change. This is due to the fact that land rights contribute to a diverse range of benefits and social values. As shown in a compiled report by the International Land Coalition (ILC), access to land rights is linked to food security, productivity, well-being and dignity, empowerment, gender equality and environmental protection. That means that securing indigenous and community land and resource rights is key in the face of global challenges, such as eradicating hunger and poverty, promoting gender equality and ensuring environmental protection. Moreover, as stated by Jenny Springer in a guest blog from the Rights and Resources Initiative (RRI), âexplicit inclusion of secure land rights for local communities and Indigenous Peoples is key to âleaving no one behindâ in global sustainable development goalsâ.
Many organizations worldwide have come to acknowledge the need to join hands in securing indigenous and community land and resource rights. During the 2013 Interlaken Conference on Scaling-up Strategies to Secure Community Land and Resources Rights this has led to the development of The Global Call to Action on Indigenous and Community Land Rights. Guided by the ILC, RRI and Oxfam, the Global Call to Action has the goal âto double the area of land recognized as owned or controlled by indigenous peoples and local communities by 2020â. Building on the efforts of existing networks and organizations, this global network is set to facilitate greater collaboration and collective action around the world. Through these efforts change will happen by enabling and supporting the recognition, implementation, and upholding of indigenous and community land rights at the national level, which is where rights and tenure governance institutions are determined. Only then will we move forward, while leaving no one behind.
youtube
To draw attention to, and move towards the stated goal of, the Global Call to Action, Oxfam, ILC and RRI are organizing a Policy Roundtable on âScaling up strategies to secure Indigenous and Community Land Rightsâ at the Annual World Bank Conference on Land and Poverty. At this invited session experiences from local communities and civil society organizations around the world are brought together to serve as an opportunity to build and expand collaborations, commitments and investments for strengthening indigenous and community land rights from local to global scales. The speakers, including Samuel Nguiffo, Richard Smith, Peter Veit, Jennifer Corpuz and Rachael Knight, will highlight the current challenges that undermine tenure security for indigenous and community land right and will identify concrete examples of positive change that should be supported and up-scaled.
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