Ms. Swiderska, Dr. Reid, Mr. Argumendo, Dr. Song, Dr. Castro, Dr. Traynor & Mr. Le Fleur (Photo courtesy of Matt Wright/IIED)
During the recent UN Climate Change Conference in
Paris (30th November – 12th December), the Adaptation
Committee released its 2015 Overview Report “Enhancing Coherent Action on Adaptation
2012-2015”, the publication provides information on adaptation to
Parties and the broader adaptation community. Within the report the Adaptation Committee
recommends that Parties underline the importance of indigenous and traditional
knowledge (I&TK), and encourage their integration into National Adaptation
Plans (NAPs). They suggest, one way that this integration can be supported is
through enhancing the accountability and enforcing implementation of existing
laws, rules and procedures dealing with I&TK and practices thus ensuring recognition of the rights of
communities and holders of I&TK and practices throughout the adaptation
process.
Natural Justice’s Dr. Cath Traynor’s presentation
entitled “Indigenous Knowledge in Climate Change
Adaptation: Recognition of the Rights of Communities and Knowledge Holders”
spoke directly to this issue. Dr. Traynor was part of a panel on the NJ, GTA,
IIED
co-hosted Side Event “Supporting Poor, Vulnerable, and Indigenous Communities”,
7th December, 2015. Dr. Traynor introduced preliminary findings of
the “Empowering Indigenous Peoples and Knowledge Systems Related to Climate
Change Adaptation and Intellectual Property Rights” OCSDNet
project, these included reflections on the university research ethics
procedures, which although they seek to ensure the protection of and consent
from human subjects, at the same time secures power relations, between ‘expert’
researchers who are seen to produce knowledge and vulnerable subjects who
produce mere data. Efforts towards more open and collaborative research needs
to understand these complex tensions that shape, and are shaped by, knowledge
production and engage critically in the ethics procedures themselves. To ensure
that community rights are recognized in adaptation, community-researcher
contracts have also been developed, their purpose is to ensure that community
intellectual property in adaptation is controlled and protected in accordance
with the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, and South African
Policies and Laws. Mr. Reino Le Fleur, Indigenous Griqua youth representative
and Community Co-Researcher on the OCSDNet project, then shared his experiences
and his plans for connecting youth with I&TK of their elders, a linkage
which in some communities in South Africa is being lost due to the historical
dispossession of lands, and the negative impacts of colonisation, apartheid and
globalisation upon traditional livelihoods.
During the Side Event, Ms. Krystyna Swiderska (IIED),
Mr. Alejandro Argumento (ANDES) and Dr. Yinching Song (Centre for Chinese
Agricultural Policy, Chinese Academy of Science) discussed the importance of
biocultural heritage in adaptation practices and highlighted 5 key actions and the benefits
of farmer to farmer seed networks.
Dr.
Carlos Potiatra Castro (University of Brazillia/GTA) then shared experiences
from the development of the Bailique Community Protocol, Brazil.
The process entailed integrating customary norms and internal governance
structures into the protocol, consideration of national and international
legislation as it applies to the communities and public policies that they have
a right to access. To date, the process has resulted in land regularisation,
and empowerment of the communities to negotiate with external actors. The community protocol approach is highly relevant to landscape scale
mitigation and adaptation programmes and projects and could also contribute to
REDD+ as a recent Policy Brief illustrates (search for “BCPs” here).
Dr. Hannah Reid (IIED)
then summarised a study that aimed to quantify the
funding for local adaptation activities against ten principles intended to
guide good ‘quality’ funding allocations. Projects scored well in terms of
effectiveness, flexibility and sustainability but poorly on transparency,
accountability and urgency.
The session drew to a close with questions from the
audience, which included asking how a community is defined, and the pro’s and
con’s of an I&TK database, and a wrap-up from Mr. Delfin Ganapin (UNDP-GEF Small
Grants Programme). Presentations and related materials can be found
on the UNFCCC Side Events webpage, search for
the “Natural Justice” adaptation session held at 15:00-16:30 hrs, Monday 07
December, 2015.
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Track the ongoing efforts of this legal NGO as we seek to assist communities to engage with legal frameworks to secure environmental and social justice.
Thursday, December 17, 2015
Recognizing the Rights of Communities and Knowledge Holders in Climate Change Adaptation – UNFCCC COP21 Side Event
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