Exploring the Bottom-up Generation of REDD+ Policy by Forest-dependent Peoples

19 de novembro de 2010

nov 19, 2010

Rubens Gomes, Sonia Bone, Manoel Cunha, André Costa Nahur, Paula Franco Moreira, Luis C. L. Meneses-Filho, Mauricio Voivodic, Talia Bonfante, Paulo Moutinho

Several Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+) projects are currently being planned and implemented in the Brazilian Amazon forest. Representatives of Brazilian Indigenous peoples and local communities recognize potential benefits of REDD+ mechanisms to the people that live in and depend on the forest. However, they are also discussing and expressing their concerns about how they should participate in the development of policies and standards for REDD+ and about possible risks associated with REDD+ projects and programmes that could disrespect traditional collective rights and generate social conflicts.

As a consequence, the Amazon Working Group, the National Council of Rubber Tappers, and the Coordination of the Indigenous Organizations of the Brazilian Amazon organized an open and public consultation process with the participation of representatives of Indigenous peoples and local communities, small land-holders, environmentalists, and researchers. The consultation process enabled them to express their concerns and define essential safeguards and minimum requirements that REDD+ initiatives in Brazil should comply with. This article aims to demonstrate the methodology that local grassroots organizations used for the public consultations in order to generate bottom-up recommendations for social and environmental safeguards for REDD+ activities that affect and involve forest-dependent peoples.

Baixar (sujeito à disponibilidade)

Download (subject to availability)

Veja também

See also

Vertical patterns of soil water uptake by plants in a primary forest and an abandoned pasture in the eastern Amazon: an isotopic approach

Vertical patterns of soil water uptake by plants in a primary forest and an abandoned pasture in the eastern Amazon: an isotopic approach

This study evaluated the water uptake patterns of a primary forest and of the savanna-like vegetation of an abandoned pasture in an eastern Amazon site. We used natural stable isotope abundance in the soil profile, as well as plots irrigated with deuterated water...

Forest fragmentation, climate change and understory fire regimes on the Amazonian landscapes of the Xingu headwaters

Forest fragmentation, climate change and understory fire regimes on the Amazonian landscapes of the Xingu headwaters

Understory fire modeling is a key tool to investigate the cornerstone concept of landscape ecology, i.e. how ecological processes relate to landscape structure and dynamics. Within this context, we developed FISC—a model that simulates fire ignition and spread and...