Land Dialogues Webinar Series
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Webinars of the series:
During the pandemic, the Land Portal Foundation, The Ford Foundation, the Thomson Reuters Foundation and the Tenure Facility launched what is now our longest-standing webinar series, the Land Dialogues webinar series. Through the multiple virtual discussions that are organized every year, the Land Dialogues promote the centrality of Indigenous and community land rights in advancing global efforts to halt the climate crisis, achieving a healthy planet and forwarding the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. It focuses on the importance of formally recognising and securing the customary lands of Indigenous Peoples and local communities as a crucial contribution to the overall climate health of the planet.
Today, the Land Dialogues webinar series, organized with our colleagues at the Tenure Facility, receives an average of 980 registrations and 330 live participants per webinar and is available in English, Spanish, Portuguese and French. Because understanding and knowledge don’t come after one webinar or one article, we return to topics, inviting familiar and new voices to participate in order to create and sustain a comunity of practice and interest around key topics of interest. We provide previews leading to COP but also follow-up to refine our understanding of what actually took place. Through this we have engaged in deepened collaborations with a variety of like-minded organizations from global to local, like the Global Alliance of Territorial Communities, the Forest Peoples Programme, the AMPB Mesoamerica and AMAN in Indonesia.
Our next Land Dialogue will delve into the important role that Indigenous and local community women play in preserving biodiversity and nature. We hope to see you there!
One of the main aims of the Land Dialogues series is and has been to highlight Indigenous knowledge and wisdom as a solution to pressing global challenges. The series does so by creating a virtual space that bridges that gap, where the term “expert” is not limited to academics or researchers, in an effort to both decolonize and democratize knowledge. In particular, the Land Portal’s role is to highlight Indigenous Peoples’ need for agency and control over the data that is about them, recognizing that data can either amplify equality or exacerbate unequal power structures.
In 2022 we remain in the midst of a once-in-a-century pandemic, increasingly violent weather events connected to the changing climate, and global security tensions due to war and conflict. Indigenous Peoples and local communities (IPLCs) are among the most vulnerable and are both directly and indirectly hard-hit by these events.