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Issues indigenous peoples' lands related Blog post
There are 2, 293 content items of different types and languages related to indigenous peoples' lands on the Land Portal.
Displaying 97 - 105 of 105

How Could Land Tenure Security Affect Conservation?

 


By Yuta Masuda and Brian E. Robinson


I’m sitting in a Mongolian yurt, listening to and trying to emulate Bataa’s* songs about love for the grasslands and the wide, treeless plains of the Mongolian Plateau. Our host sings with consuming passion. I might have brushed his enthusiasm off as a show two weeks ago. But after living and working in these grasslands, the feeling of freedom that comes from unobstructed, far-off distant horizon is infectious.


Eight reasons why tribal people are great conservationists

By  Lewis Evans, Survival International


For Earth Day (April 22), Survival International reveals some of the amazing ways in which tribal peoples are the best conservationists and guardians of the natural world:


1. The Baka “Pygmies” have over 15 words for elephant


The Baka people know so much about elephants, they have different words for them according to their sex, age and even temperament.


Indigenous peoples are the real climate experts. So why aren't we listening to them?

By Gina Cosentino, Social Development Specialist, World Bank and Climate Investment Funds

 

Everything old is new again, at least when it comes to searching for workable and proven solutions to addressing climate change. Indigenous peoples have developed, over time, innovative climate-smart practices rooted in traditional knowledge and their relationship with nature.

 

 

Linked Open Data and the Global Call to Action on Indigenous & Community Land Rights

At the end of September, the global land community met in Bern, Switzerland for the 2nd International Conference on Community Land Rights, to tackle some of the most pressing issues facing those who rely on access to community lands for their livelihoods. Discussions at the conference focused on the perpetual divide between indigenous peoples and governments with regard to land ownership.