Investors and development institutions urged to adopt new Land Rights Standard to reach climate goals

15 Nov 2022

(SHARM EL SHEIKH, Egypt, 15 November 2022) – As global recognition of the planet’s climate emergency comes to a head at the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP27) in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt, it’s increasingly clear that protecting and restoring Earth’s forests and landscapes must include securing the rights of the local peoples that inhabit and safeguard them.

But while the Indigenous Peoples (IPs), local communities (LCs), and Afro-descendant Peoples (ADPs) that inhabit many of the world’s most biodiversity-rich areas have come a long way in obtaining recognition, non-state institutions and investors still lack a common set of principles that can help them ensure that their climate, biodiversity, and development investments are rights-based.

The Land Rights Standard, launched on 11 November by the Rights and Resources Initiative (RRI) and the Global Landscapes Forum (GLF) during COP27, seeks to remedy this gap. Unlike the various social and environmental frameworks, standards, and certification systems that have so far been devised to ensure sustainable land investments by non-state actors, the Standard lays out a comprehensive, clear set of principles that have been developed in consultation with Indigenous, local community, and Afro-descendant organizations. It was instigated by RRI and the Indigenous Peoples Major Group (IPMG), with dedicated support from the GLF and the Forest Peoples’ Programme (FPP).

Solange Bandiaky-Badji, RRI’s Coordinator, introduced the Standard as principles grounded in international human rights law and developed in collaboration with IPs, LCs and ADPs – particularly with the women within these groups. “Our goal now is to push climate, conservation and development institutions and private companies to adopt these principles and pave the way for a more sustainable, equitable and just future,” she said.

Pasang Dolma Sherpa, the Executive Director of the Center for Indigenous Peoples’ Research and Development (CIPRED), highlighted how sharp and unprecedented declines in biodiversity have resulted in calls for a doubling of the amount of land held under protected area management. But these calls have also heightened the risks of falling into the trap of human rights violations that have characterized conventional conservation approaches to date – risks the Standard can help them mitigate. She said, “I am really hopeful that this Standard will help not just Indigenous Peoples, but all of us in maintaining our surroundings and ecosystems.”

Kim Carstensen, Director General of the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), pointed out that the Standard’s principles are “very clear” and will go a long way in encouraging non-state entities such as FSC itself to continuously improve their own standards, human rights and environmental due diligence systems, certification systems, and implemented actions for rights-based approaches to sustainable landscapes. “We will be very happy to work together to promote these different ways of looking at things, as evidently land rights are one of the most important areas for climate, biodiversity, and social welfare in the world,” he said. Carstensen added that FSC plans to share the Standard’s principles with its certificate holders to inspire their work, as well as incorporate them in the next generation of its own standards.

Cecile Ndjebet, the Founding President of the African Women’s Network for Community Management of Forests (REFACOF), highlighted about the potential to leverage the Land Rights Standard to promote responsible investment by the private sector and other actors on community land in Africa. “This is not a choice anymore,” she said. “It’s a matter of our lives: of the survival of our communities and our planet.”

#GLFClimate #LandRightsNow

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To access the launchpad recording, request interviews, and for more information about the new Land Rights Standard please contact Kelly Quintero at k.quintero@cgiar.org.
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Rights and Resources Initiative (RRI)
The Rights and Resources Initiative is a global coalition of 21 Partners and more than 150 rightsholders organizations and their allies dedicated to advancing the forestland and resource rights of Indigenous Peoples, Afro-descendant Peoples, local communities, and the women within these communities. Members capitalize on each other’s strengths, expertise, and geographic reach to achieve solutions more effectively and efficiently. RRI leverages the power of its global Coalition to amplify the voices of local peoples and proactively engage governments, multilateral institutions, and private sector actors to adopt institutional and market reforms that support the realization of their rights and self-determined development. By advancing a strategic understanding of the global threats and opportunities resulting from insecure land and resource rights, RRI develops and promotes rights-based approaches to business and development and catalyzes effective solutions to scale rural tenure reform and enhance sustainable resource governance. RRI is coordinated by the Rights and Resources Group, a non-profit organization based in Washington, DC. For more information, please visit www.rightsandresources.org.

About the Global Landscapes Forum
The  Global Landscapes Forum (GLF) is the world’s largest knowledge-led platform on integrated land use, dedicated to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals and Paris Climate Agreement. The Forum takes a holistic approach to create sustainable landscapes that are productive, prosperous, equitable and resilient, and considers five cohesive themes of food and livelihoods, landscape restoration, rights, finance and measuring progress. It is led by the Center for International Forestry Research-World Agroforestry Centre (CIFOR-ICRAF), in collaboration with its co-founders UNEP and the World Bank, and its charter members. This conference is made possible through our sponsors and working partners.

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