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Displaying 3381 - 3390 of 6948Agroforestry Concessions (ACtion)
General
Main Outcome 1: In priority areas, AC contracts are registered and related GHG emissions reduction is estimated by appropriate national and subnational authorities.: This first outcome will address the current lack of institutional and technical capacity to implement the AC provisions by providing provide strategic advice, information and technical protocols that ensure that government agencies involved in its implementation have a clear direction and attainable goals and manage ACs governance tools such as a zoning tool, a registry system and an aligned cadaster. Main Outcome 2: Family Farmers in AC areas implement sustainable land management options (AC SLM and SSF) tailored to local socio-ecological contexts and comply with AC requirements including zero deforestation with the support of relevant GoP stakeholders. In targeted areas farmers will be encouraged to enroll in AC and adopt AC relevant practices to support the transition towards zero deforestation and agroforestry-based livelihoods through the implementation of co-designed and context-specific land use practices. They will receive support from subnational authorities and NGOs trained by the project. Main Outcome 3: Financial institutions support new sustainable practices of agroforestry farmers under AC. This third main outcome addresses the need for incentives that promote more sustainable production practices by small-scale farmers in the Amazon. The positive incentive approach is a pillar of the project; it focuses on helping the government and the private sector develop tailored incentives packages that will ensure farmers’ engagement with the ACs system, their timely enrollment, and sustained compliance with their new environmental obligations. Integrated and inclusive financial and non-financial incentive schemes to support sustainable practices will be co-designed with government agencies, financial institutions and farmers, thus capturing their needs.
Objectives
In 2011, the Government of Peru (GoP) instituted the Agroforestry Concessions (AC) scheme as part of the new Forest and Wildlife Law. It is a major and innovative legal and policy measure aimed at formalizing the tenure of smallholders currently occupying public forest land and at incorporating them into the forest sector under the assumption that the legal conditions associated with ACs will reduce deforestation and secure restoration of degraded state forest land. The regulations for the AC scheme were promulgated in 2015, and legal procedures and guidelines issued in 2017. The AC scheme can significantly reduce deforestation while improving livelihoods of vulnerable, small-scale Amazonian farmers. We describe its potential positive impacts in Section 11.2.2. In short, previous work by GGGI and ICRAF demonstrates that successful roll-out of the AC scheme could reduce GHG emissions of Peru’s Land use, Land Use Change and Forestry (LULUCF) sector by about 20.3%, while improving the livelihoods of >100,000 vulnerable smallholder families. The objective of the proposed project — ACtion — is to realize the Agroforestry Concessions scheme by working with the Government of Peru (GoP) to build the legal, institutional, technical and financial enabling contexts for successful implementation at scale.
Protection of land rights and promotion of disaster management in indigenous territories in Honduras, Phase 1
General
Schutz von Landrechten und Förderung von Katastrophenmanagement in indigenen Gebieten in Honduras, Phase 1
Objectives
Schutz von Landrechten und Förderung von Katastrophenmanagement in indigenen Gebieten in Honduras, Phase 1
ACCESS (Advancing CSO's Capacities to Enhance Sustainability Solutions)
General
The action seeks to ensure that marginalized forest communities affected by land conflicts and the depletion of the natural resources which they depend upon are able to take action and to raise their voice to recover their rights and legally enforce the protection of their forest, and hold the Government and private companies accountable for their actions. The proposed Action aims at achieving a gender equity-based secured and sustainable community-based forest and natural resources governance i
Securing Land Rights for Women and Rural Communities in South-Eastern Liberia
General
CSOs become effective and independent development actors in influencing policy and implementation to address land rights and poverty reduction at national, county and community levels in South-eastern Liberia
Africa Regional (Kenya, Somalia and Uganda): Improving Governance of Land and Natural Resources
General
1) To improve land conflict management in Eastern Africa by supporting the adoption of a regional agenda on management of conflict over land and natural resources, as well as by strengthening land governance and related policies in three (3) pilot countries. 2) To champion the importance of rule of law in strengthening land governance by combining research, learning and organizational capacity development activities.
Objectives
The project aims to establish IDLO, at both the policy and programming level, as a recognized and credible player in the field of land governance, with important and unique capacities in terms of land conflict management and mitigation that are directly relevant to climate justice, particularly for women and girls, and food security.
Target Groups
Direct beneficiaries: Chiefs of Justice, Environmental Courts, Ministries of Land or Natural Resources, Directors of Ministry of Land or Natural Resources. Indirect beneficiaries: Populations in Kenya, Somalia and Uganda, particularly women and girls. Experts from governments, the African Union, the United Nations system and other international organizations, think tanks, academia, civil society organizations, and the private sector.
SWE-2012-137: Land Grabbing or Agricultural Investments: the Two Sides of the Coin
General
During the last decade land acquisitions by foreign investors in developing countries have accelerated tremendously. This project aims to enhance our understanding about the determinants and effects of this process. First, what determines where the acquisitions are taking place, their size when they do take place, and what characterizes the countries from which the investors come will be investigate using a macro-level approach. Second, how small-scale farmers in Zambia adapt to the introduction of larger farms will be investigated using a micro-level approach. Since Zambia during the last decade attracted large quantities of agricultural FDI of several different kinds it is very well suited as a case. Preliminary work indicates that large-scale land deals results are more likely in countries that are poor and closer to the sea or a navigable river.