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Community Organizations People Centered Conservation
People Centered Conservation
People Centered Conservation
Acronym
PPC
Civil Society Organization
Website

Location

Mongolia
Working languages
inglés

Vision

To become an organization that shaped Mongolia in a positive way.

Mission

PCC is a Mongolian NGO established in 2006, which aims to promote the protection of natural resources through support to the activities of local residents and civil society, with a strong commitment to addressing issues for gender equality and vulnerable groups.

Values

People, at PCC, we value people, we believe on people’s power. Everyone is important and everyone deserves to exercise his/her rights.
Planet, at PCC, we respect and conserve the environment.
Independence, at PCC, we strive to be an organization that is independent and self -contained.

Approach

PCC approach in organizational management and as well as in the work is participatory. We are practitioners of participatory approaches and building local capacity bottom to top.
 

Members:

Narangerel Yansanjav
Lkhamdulam Natsagdorj
Suvd Boldbaatar
B. Munkhtuvshin

Resources

Displaying 6 - 7 of 7

Supporting the implementation of the VGGT in Mongolia

Videos
Noviembre, 2017
Mongolia
Asia sudoriental

The purpose of these Voluntary guidelines is to serve as a reference and to provide guidance to improve the governance of tenure of land, sheries and forests with the overarching goal of achieving food security for all and to support the progressive realization of the right to adequate food in the context of national food security. This video is produced by PCC in their effort to support the implementation of the VGGT

WOLTS

WOLTS (Women’s Land Tenure Security) is a long-term multi-country, multi-organisational land governance initiative. The project has delivered stronger evidence on threats to women’s land rights through its action-research. It has also contributed to strengthening community, civil society and local government capacity to protect women’s land rights and govern land in a participatory, inclusive and equitable way. This in turn has led to real gains in women’s land rights in project communities and beyond. The project has focused its action-research on gender and land relations in pastoralist communities affected by mining investments, initially in Mongolia and Tanzania. From this evidence base, and working closely with pilot communities, it has developed a Gender and Land Champions Training Programme for locally-chosen men and women to become effective and confident agents of change. In Mongolia, the project has also developed and started to roll out a set of Gender Guidelines to support local landscape development planning, in collaboration with the national land agency, ALAMGAC.