Skip to main content

page search

News & Events VER: Reflexiones de la COP26 en #LandDialogues
VER: Reflexiones de la COP26 en #LandDialogues
WATCH: COP26 Reflections in #LandDialogues

 

 


"At last, we are beginning to harvest  more than 100 years

of international advocacy of Indigenous peoples."


- Dr. Myrna Cunningham Kain, on her initial reactions to the $1.7 billion pledge

 


The Land Dialogues are back for another season of thought-provoking discussions, and yesterday's opening webinar gave us a lot to look forward to this year. With an all-star panel and an expert moderator, the webinar asked probing questions about the $1.7 billion pledge coming out of COP26 to support forest tenure rights of indigenous people and local communities, barriers facing multilateral agencies, the necessary co-existance of statutory and customary land rights, and more. Did you miss the first Land Dialogues of 2022? Watch the replay here.

 

 

 

 

 


"It is [often] much easier to change statutory law than it is

to change customary ways that have been in place for a long time

and are durable because they actually attend to people's real needs."

 

- Dr. Jon Unruh, on one of the reasons why the pledged money should go to Indigenous and local communities 

 


About the Land Dialogues

 

This year´s Land Dialogues series will focus on the opportunities this recognition presents and explore what immediate steps are needed to ensure indigenous and local communities legal land rights recognition. The discussions will look at the legal frameworks advancing tenure rights, the use of data as a source of empowerment, innovative tools supporting governance of territories and the power of stories to other themes that affect and offer opportunities to the most vulnerable groups within the land sector to claim their rights, monitor and hold decision-makers accountable. 

 

With this in mind, a series of four webinars will be held in English with simultaneous translation to Spanish, Portuguese and French. The Land Dialogues are co-organized by the Land Portal Foundation, the Tenure Facility, the Ford Foundation and the Thomson Reuters Foundation.  

 

For more information, explore the Land Portal's portfolio on Indigenous & Community Land Rights

 

Related content:

Event

Post COP26 Reflections: A Focus on Opportunities for Customary Land Rights

19 May 2022

2021 was a year of big promises concerning tenure rights. At COP26, an unprecedented 1.7 billion dollar pledge was made in support of ancestral community land rights, aiming to place IPLCs rights central to global policy-making and discourse. The questions remain; when and how funding will reach communities and how it will be used effectively.

Land Portal Foundation
The Tenure Facility
Ford Foundation
Thomson Reuters Foundation