International discussions on REDD+ and climate change have explicitly addressed the needs of indigenous peoples. However, to date, efforts to link REDD+ and climate change activities to the specific protection of rights of women have been very limited. This brief explores how REDD+ planning and implementation can and should enhance the conditions of rural women in Asia and the Pacific.
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Library ResourceInstitutional & promotional materialsMay, 2011India, Nepal, South-Eastern Asia
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Library ResourceInstitutional & promotional materialsOctober, 2009Nepal, Vietnam, South-Eastern Asia
This bulletin draws on country-level experience to share civil society perspectives on the challenges, opportunities, and possible approaches for pro-poor REDD. As governments begin to formulate their national REDD programs, questions are emerging about the role of local people in design and implementation, and the socio-economic implications for the rural poor. Drawing on experiences from Nepal and Vietnam, this bulletin includes:
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Library Resource
Summary of the UK Land Policy Forum meeting held on 13 October 2016
Conference Papers & ReportsOctober, 2016GlobalThis is the summary of the UK Land Policy Forum meeting held on 13 October 2016.
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Library Resource
Agenda of the UK Land Policy Forum meeting held on 13 October 2016
Conference Papers & ReportsOctober, 2016GlobalThis is the agenda of the UK Land Policy Forum meeting held on 13 October 2016.
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Library Resource
HPG Working Paper, June 2007
Reports & ResearchJanuary, 2007AfricaThis report is part of a broader comparative effort by the Overseas Development Institute’s Humanitarian Policy Group on Land Tenure in Conflict and Post-Conflict Situations, which aims to inform and improve the policy and practice of humanitarian action and to inform related areas of international policy. It seeks to understand how land issues affect and are affected by violence and conflict resolution, what responses are appropriate and what lessons can be learned from specific contexts of land tenure interventions, both during and after conflict.
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Library ResourcePolicy Papers & BriefsJanuary, 2007Global
This brief considers progress made in understanding gender and development between the 1982 and the 2008 World Development Report. The authors acknowledge achievements in valuing women's dynamic roles in agricultural productivity and development in general, but also point to areas in which the most recent report fall short, including an acknowledgement of the lack of policy recommendations for deeper social and structural inequalities.
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