The Forest Peoples Programme (FPP) and the Amerindian Peoples Association (APA) have published a new special report entitled ‘Indigenous Peoples’ Rights, Forests And Climate Policies In Guyana: A Special Report'. The report, edited by Kate Dooley and Tom Griffiths, highlights
the vital need for good land tenure governance in the development of
sustainable forest and climate initiatives.
One for the key findings, based on detailed fieldwork, is that insecure land rights and gaps in national
legal frameworks as they relate to indigenous peoples’ rights are a major
obstacle to the effective and efficient implementation of national land use and
climate policies in Guyana.
The authors call for
timely reforms and strengthening of national laws and policies to ensure proper
protections for customary land rights and adherence to the core standard of
free, prior and informed consent (FPIC).
The report also underlines the pressing need for robust
measures by bilateral and multilateral international agencies to ensure compliance
with their own safeguard policies in ongoing forest governance, livelihood,
infrastructure, energy and climate programmes.
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