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LAND RIGHTS AT UNFCCC COP30

November 10-21, 2025 | Belém, Brazil -

Why land rights matter for climate, biodiversity, and desertification

Understanding land rights in the Rio Conventions

This technical guide examines how land rights are addressed within the Rio Conventions and their respective instruments, identifies policy gaps, and proposes improvements for future policy integration. It emphasises secure land tenure as an essential, just and effective element of the Rio Conventions for both people and the planet.

Read the guide

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What we are asking

We welcome the growing recognition across the Rio Conventions that secure land tenure and community-led data are key to tackling land degradation, biodiversity loss and the climate crisis. Yet under the UNFCCC, land rights still remain at the margins of climate policy. This must change.

This must change.

What's at stake

At COP30, governments have a historic opportunity to act on the root causes of the climate and nature crisis. Two major global commitments on land tenure can reshape our collective future—if countries step up to deliver them.

The Land and Forest Tenure Pledge 2.0 will renew and expand the landmark $1.7 billion commitment made at COP26—mobilising new resources to secure the land rights of Indigenous Peoples, local communities, and Afro-descendant peoples. This next phase broadens its focus beyond forests to include all ecosystems—grasslands, wetlands, drylands, and coastal areas — where people and nature coexist and thrive.

Alongside it, the Intergovernmental Land Tenure Commitment will establish national hectare-based targets for the recognition of land rights, while strengthening laws and policies to create an enabling environment for securing tenure worldwide.

At COP30, we call on governments to:

  • Uphold and fully implement both pledges, ensuring stronger financial, political, and territorial commitments across all ecosystems.
  • Provide direct financing to Indigenous Peoples, local communities, and Afro-descendant organisations, ensuring resources reach those protecting the land.
  • Legally recognise community land rights and reform tenure laws to protect the people who live on and from the land.

Land rights are a critical adaptation and mitigation strategy. When tenure is secure, communities invest in sustainable land use, protect forests and carbon sinks, restore degraded ecosystems, and strengthen resilience to climate shocks.

At COP30, we call on governments to:

  • Prioritise tenure security for smallholders, pastoralists, Indigenous Peoples, Afro-descendants, women, and youth as a core climate strategy.
  • Recognise land rights as an essential pillar of both mitigation and adaptation—without secure land, there is no lasting climate action.
  • Embed land tenure in national climate policies, just transition plans, and carbon market regulations to ensure justice and equity drive every solution.

Land connects climate, biodiversity, and land degradation neutrality. Yet policy responses remain fragmented. COP30 is the moment for governments to bridge those silos and act through one united vision.

At COP30, we call on governments, financial institutions and private sector to:

  • Align national commitments under the UNFCCC (climate), CBD (biodiversity), and UNCCD (land degradation) so they mutually reinforce land tenure security as a shared foundation.
  • Create integrated financing frameworks that treat secure tenure as a cross-cutting investment delivering climate, biodiversity, and land restoration outcomes together.
  • Place Indigenous Peoples, local communities, and Afro-descendant peoples at the forefront of implementation, recognising their proven leadership in protecting biodiversity, storing carbon, and preventing land degradation.

Over 80% of lithium projects and more than half of nickel, copper and zinc projects are located in the territories of Indigenous People.

The global shift to renewable energy cannot repeat the injustices of the past. A truly JUST energy transition begins with respect for human rights and secure land tenure.

We’re already witnessing how poorly governed energy and mining projects have led to land grabs, displacements and rights violations - harming Indigenous Peoples and local communities. Without safeguards, the same communities will again bear the costs of the transition meant to save our planet.

Communities must have the power and autonomy to decide if and under what terms energy projects take place on their lands and territories.

We call on governments, investors and companies to:

  • Uphold Free, Prior and Informed consent (FPIC) and the right to self determination
  • Guarantee transparency, benefit sharing, and environmental protection
  • Ensure full participation of affected communities at every stage of planning and implementation

Data from ILC and our members demonstrates that without stronger monitoring and accountability mechanisms, renewable energy development risks deepening inequalities instead of driving climate justice.

Land tenure is where climate action, biodiversity conservation, and land restoration converge. Securing community land rights is not just one solution—it is the solution that makes all others work.

At COP30, governments must act boldly:
Finance it. Legislate it. Align it. Deliver it.

Constituency messaging

PASTORALISTS: THE MISSING CARBON SINK

Don’t forget the 34%. It’s time to recognise rangelands as climate ecosystems and put them on the climate agenda.

Grasslands store 34% of the world’s carbon - nearly as much as forests — yet they remain invisible in global climate commitments and finance. These vast ecosystems are the lifeblood of around 500 million pastoralists and critical to food security, biodiversity and resilience. They also thrive on movement, because pastoralist mobility keeps grasslands healthy, carbon locked in the soil and biodiversity alive. As governments shape the path to COP30 and beyond, recognising and restoring rangelands must stand alongside forest and wetlands as a pillar of climate action. Protecting the people who manage them is protecting one of the planet’s largest sinks.

Mobility Matters: Grasslands breathe because pastoralists move. When movement stops, degradation begins. When the mobility of pastoralists are protected, rangelands heal and the planet can begin to breathe easier.

WHAT WE’RE ASKING

  • Secure tenure and mobility rights: Guarantee pastoralists’ right to land, territory, and mobility as a foundation for rangeland restoration and resilience
  • Stop the conversion of rangelands: Protect rangelands from conversion to cropland, infrastructure or inappropriate afforestation
  • Strengthen pastoralist alliances and leadership: invest in and recognise pastoralist-led alliances as equal partners in shaping climate and land policies
YOUTH: INCLUDE THEM TO SUCCEED

Across the world, 395 million rural youth are watching their land — and their futures in agriculture — dry up. The climate crisis is eroding land productivity, degrading soils, and threatening livelihoods that sustain entire communities. So where does that leave the next generation?

Young people are not just victims of this crisis; they are innovators, farmers, organisers, and leaders, building solutions from the ground up. Their knowledge, energy, and commitment are essential to a just transition and resilient food systems.

At COP30, we call on governments, companies, and investors to:

  • Integrate youth-led and Indigenous knowledge systems into national adaptation strategies and agricultural programs, bridging science and tradition through co-design approaches that reflect local realities.
  • Ensure participation by promoting the meaningful inclusion of young people in decision-making spaces, making their demands and proposals visible on the climate agenda.
  • Unlock finance by creating dedicated, accessible youth finance windows under the Green Climate Fund and the New Collective Quantified Goal to fund youth-led initiatives in agriculture and climate adaptation.
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES: CLIMATE ACTION STARTS WITH LAND RIGHTS

Although Indigenous Peoples manage about a quarter of the world’s land, they legally own only a fraction of it. Yet, they are among the most effective stewards of nature, protecting ecosystems that regulate our climate and sustain our planet.

As the world accelerates the energy transition, it must not come at the expense of Indigenous Peoples rights, lands and territories. True transformation requires leadership, consent, and participation from those who have safeguarded the Earth for generations.

At COP30, we call on governments, companies, and investors to:

  • Respect and strengthen Indigenous Peoples' rights in all energy transition efforts, ensuring free, prior, and informed consent, and full participation in decision-making.
  • Renew and expand the Forest Tenure Pledge into a broader Land and Forest Tenure Pledge 2.0—with direct financing, political and territorial commitments, and inclusion of all ecosystems, including rangelands.
  • Support the Intergovernmental Land Tenure Commitment, establishing national, hectare-based targets for recognizing the land rights of Indigenous Peoples, Afro-descendant peoples, and local communities.
  • Ensure direct access to finance for Indigenous-led organizations managing land, forests, and ecosystems critical to global climate goals.
  • Recognize tenure security as central to achieving the 2030 targets on halting deforestation, biodiversity loss, and reversing land degradation.

There is no climate action without Indigenous leadership and land rights. Protecting their territories means protecting the planet.

LAND DEFENDERS: ALLIES, NOT VICTIMS

In 2024, for every land or environmental defender killed, at least eight others were attacked.

The latest ALLIED dataset documents nearly 2,500 incidents of threats, detentions, kidnappings, beatings, and criminalisation across 75 countries between 2023 and 2024. Indigenous Peoples—just 6% of the global population—faced 35% of all attacks in 2024.

Defenders challenging harm from the oil, gas, and mining sectors were the most at risk, representing nearly 43% of all attacks where data was available. These are not isolated incidents — they are assaults on those protecting the ecosystems that sustain our planet.

At COP30, we call on governments, companies, and investors to:

  • End the criminalisation and intimidation of defenders;
  • Protect their right to speak out and organise;
  • Ensure that climate and energy policies include binding commitments to defender protection and corporate accountability.

There is no climate justice if those defending the planet live in fear.

WOMEN: LEADING CLIMATE ACTION

In Mexico and Central America alone, 1,698 women land and environmental defenders have been attacked in just three years. Around the world, women on the frontlines of the climate crisis face systemic targeting that limit their rights, voice, and participation — even as they lead efforts to protect land, water, and livelihoods.

There is no climate justice without gender justice. When women hold secure land rights, climate action is stronger, more equitable, and more effective. Yet their leadership remains under-recognised and underfunded.

At COP30, we call on governments, companies, and investors to:

  • Recognise grassroots women as climate leaders, not beneficiaries — guaranteeing direct access to policy-making spaces, funding, and platforms that value their lived experience and traditional knowledge.
  • Strengthen gender-responsive policies, including NDCs with gender-disaggregated land data and targets, and a COP30 Gender Action Plan that addresses power imbalances and ensures adequate funding.
  • Reform climate finance mechanisms to make women’s land tenure security a project approval criterion, and to establish dedicated, accessible funding for grassroots women’s organisations.
  • Protect women land and environmental defenders through national and international mechanisms that prevent violence and uphold their rights.
  • Integrate gender justice into loss and damage frameworks, recognising land dispossession as a form of loss and ensuring that compensation reaches women directly.
SMALLHOLDER FARMERS: BIG CLIMATE SOLUTIONS

Smallholder farmers grow more with less—producing nearly one-third of the world’s food using just 24% of agricultural land. They feed the world while facing the greatest risks from the climate crisis.

Imagine what they could do with secure land rights and direct climate support.

At COP30, we call on governments, companies, and investors to:

  • Deliver direct climate finance to family and smallholder farmers and their organisations, recognising their central role in food security, adaptation, and mitigation.
  • Ensure intergenerational continuity and preserve traditional ecological knowledge by guaranteeing equitable access to land for rural women and youth.
  • Prevent rural flight by protecting land rights and investing in vibrant, sustainable rural economies.
  • Stop land fragmentation and loss through policies that restore degraded, expropriated, or conflict-affected lands.
  • Protect land and food security in conflict zones, reaffirming that land and access to food must never be used as weapons of war.

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ILC AND MEMBER EVENTS

10 November

12H | Land, climate and biodiversity

Voces rurales sin fronteras: acción intergeneracional por el clima y la biodiversidad


Location: Pabellon Colombia

Co-organisers: YPARD

16.40H | Youth and land

Rural Youth Climate Action: From the Territory to Negotiations at COP30


Location: Agrizone, Auditorio 3

Co-organisers: YPARD

9.30H | Indigenous Peoples

Indigenous Initiatives for Territorial Monitoring and Surveillance: The Experience of the Territorial Planning and Information Center (CIPTO)


Location: Amazonía Forever Pavilion, Goeldi Museum Chalet, Av. Governador Magalhães Barata, 376

Co-organisers: AIDESEP

16.30H | Women and climate action

Panel /Encuentro de organizaciones feminista para la Acción Climática


Location: CASA DE LOS PUEBLOS

Co-organisers: YPARD

TBC | Indigenous Peoples

Brazil’s Indigenous and Traditional Communities Combatting Deforestation 🡪 Conexão biomas e biodiversidade em florestas extremas (úmida e seca)


Location: Blue zone, Sala7

Co-organisers: Plataforma Semiaridos, Amazônia de pé + Centro Sabiá

11 November

11.30H | Environmental defenders

Environmental Defenders & Communities: A Cross-cutting Priority in Climate Negotiations & Decisions


Location: Blue zone, Side event room 8

Co-organisers: GW, Civicus, Natural Justice, CambiaMO, ACE Observatory, Amnesty, APNED, Brazilian Committee of Human Rights Defenders, IPRI, FIDH

12H | land and climate

Rural voices wihout borders: intergenerational action for climate and biodiversity


Location: Colombia pavillion - COP30, Blue Zone

15.15H | AOFH Voices

AOFH Voices from the Land opening plenary session


Location: AOFH area

Co-organisers: YPARD Global

16.30H | Indigenous Peoples

Launching the LEAD Initiative


Location: Grassroots Movement for Climate Venue, Travessa Piedade, 426, Bairro Reduto, Belém

Co-organisers: GW + ALLIED

TBC | Food systems

Sistemas Alimentares Sustentáveis como ferramenta de resiliência


Location: Blue zone

Co-organisers: Plataforma Semiaridos, Associação de Jovens; Engajamundo; Barranquilla+20; Plataforma Semiáridos América Latina; Rede Brasileira de Biodiversidade e Clima; YPARD LAC

11.45H | Energy transition

Nada sobre nós sem nós: o Consentimento Livre, Prévio e Informado e a transição energética justa


Location: Zona Verde - Círculo dos Povos

Co-organisers: Engajamundo + Plataforma Semiáridos da América Latina

13H | Indigenous Peoples

Indigenous Territorial Governance (Self-Governments and Other Organizational Forms) as Alternatives to Mining, Fires, and for Restoration


Location: R. Augusto Corrêa, 01 - Guamá, Belém PA, 66075-110.

Co-organisers: AIDESEP

15.20H | Indigenous Peoples and data

Indigenous Navigator: The Climate Change Module for Community-Based Data Collection and Human Rights Analysis


Location: Blue Zone - Indigenous Peoples Pavilion, Zone B. PV-D117

Co-organisers: AIPP

18H | Youth plenary

Plenária Mundial das Juventudes


Location: Espaço Cultural Curro Velho - Cidade das Juventudes

Co-organisers: Secretaria Nacional de Juventude and Presidency Youth Climate Champion

12 November

9.45H | Youth and agriculture

Feeding the Future: Youth Perspectives on Agriculture, Climate, and COP30


Location: CASA DEL SUR GLOBAL

Co-organisers: Samdhana Institute; Youth Climate Justice Fund; Environmental Justice Fund; Fondo Socioambiental Plurales; Alianza Socioambiental Fondos del Sur

14.30h | Green energy transition (ILC)

Green Energy - Red Flags


Location: Sala 5 (Piso 1), Travessa Piedade, 426, 66053-210, Reduto, Belém, Pará

Co-organisers: ILC, Plataforma de Defensoras y Defensores de la Tierra y el Territorio.

15.15H | Youth and farmers

First Plenary of the Action on Food Youth and Farmers Co-Host: Voices from the land.


Location: Action on Food Hub, Blue Zone, Pavilion PV156

Co-organisers: World Rural Forum YPARD, EmpoderaClima and the Youth and Farmers Co-Host

17H | Youth and climate

Juventudes dos Semiáridos: Ancestralidade e Convivência com o Semiáridos como ferramentas de enfrentamento à Crise Climática


Location: IOM Pavilion

Co-organisers: Plataforma Semiaridos

TBC | Youth and land

Juventudes dos Semiáridos: Ancestralidade e Convivência com o Semiáridos como ferramenta de enfrentamento a Crise Climática.


Location: Azul – Pavilhão da Organização Internacional de Migração + MMA - Secretaria Nacional de Povos e Comunidades Tradicionais + Pavilhão de Desenvolvimento Rural Sustentável

Co-organisers: Plataforma Semiaridos

9H | Land and financing

FINANCIAR DESDE LA BASE: Lecciones de Fondos Liderados por el Sur Global para la Justicia Socioambiental.


Location: Children & Youth Pavilion at COP30

Co-organisers: YPARD Global

11.30H | Indigenous Peoples and NDCs

Indigenous Peoples and NDCs 3.0: Rights, recognition, and the way forward


Location: Blue Zone - Zone C, Side Event Room 3

Co-organisers: International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (IWGIA), Asia Indigenous Peoples Pact Foundation (AIPP), Association des Femmes Peules et Peuples Autochtones du Tchad (AFPAT), Center for Support of Indigenous Peoples of the North (CSIPN), Nepal Federation of Indigenous Nationalities (NEFIN), Organización Nacional de Mujeres Indígenas Andinas y Amazónicas del Perú (ONAMIAP)

15.05H | Youth and farmers

Juventudes pela justiça climática nos semiáridos da América Latina


Location: Zona Verde - Círculo dos Povos

Co-organisers: Plataforma Semiaridos

16.45H | Indigenous Peoples and the Amazon

Fossil Fuel–Free Amazon: Indigenous Peoples Present Viable Solutions


Location: Blue Zone, Room 6

Co-organisers: AIDESEP

TBC | Food systems

Food Roots and Routes: Adaptação climática no semiárido brasileiro (banco de sementes, SAFs)


Location: Blue zone

Co-organisers: Plataforma Semiaridos

13 November

13H | Launch of LEAD

Official High-Level Launch of LEAD


Location: Blue Zone, Ford's Pavillion

Co-organisers: LEAD, ALLIED

A new multilateral initiative bringing together leaders and champions from diverse sectors to drive policy change and elevate the role of environmental human rights defenders in climate governance

14.25H | Indigenous Peoples and energy transition

From Extraction to Regeneration: Indigenous Peoples and the Impacts of Mining for the Energy Transition


Location: Blue Zone - Indigenous Peoples Pavilion, Zone B. PV-D117

Co-organisers: SIRGE Coalition, Cultural Survival, Batani Foundation, Tallgrass Institute, Earthworks, IWGIA.

TBC | Land rights

Reimaginando a Caatinga


Location: Green zone

Co-organisers: Plataforma Semiaridos, Consórcio NE, Centro Sabiá

16.35H | Indigenous women

Mujeres indígenas en primera línea: defendiendo los territorios ancestrales y el planeta


Location: Pabellón indígena / Pabellón azul

Co-organisers: ONAMIAP y Indigenous Peoples Rights International (IPRI)

18.30H | Indigenous Peoples and climate finance

Breaking Barriers: How Indigenous and Community Governance Is Transforming Climate Finance


Location: Sala de eventos paralela 4, Blue Zone

Co-organisers: AIDESEP

9H | Smallholder farmers

From Farmer-led adaptation to national scale: Scaling farmer resilience for climate action


Location: Blue Zone, Food and Agriculture Pavilion

Co-organisers: World Rural Forum and Pula Advisors.

14H | Territórios Semiáridos

Territórios Semiáridos em Rede


Location: Green Zone, Pavilhão Consórcio Nordeste

Co-organisers: Plataforma Semiaridos

14.30H | Indigenous Peoples and energy transition

Semiáridos do Planeta: Água de Chuva, Convivência com os Biomas e resiliência climática.Contribuição dos povos dos semiáridos do Brasil, Chaco, Corredor Seco e Sahel.


Location: Cúpula dos Povos

Co-organisers: Articulação Semiárido Brasileiro, Articulação Semiárido Brasileiro

16H | Land defenders

Defensoras en Acción: Estrategias Colectivas hacia la COP4 de Escazú


Location: CUMBRE DE LOS PUEBLOS

Co-organisers: Plurales, Colectivo Casa, Fondo Tierra Viva, Plataforma de Defensores y Defensoras de Tierra y Territorios ILC/LAC, EFAC.

15H | Indigenous Peoples and carbon markets

Carbon Markets, Forests, and Indigenous Alternatives


Location: Blue Zone, Room 4

Co-organisers: AIDESEP

14 November

11.30H | Youth and land

Diálogo “Juventudes do Semiárido: Participação e Protagonismo pelo Clima e contra a


Location: Zona Verde, Pavilhão Consórcio Nordeste

Co-organisers: Ministério do Meio Ambiente e Terre Des Hommes Scheiwz

16.45H | Land rights and climate (ILC)

UNCCRD: A strategic collaborative bottum-up people-centered approach to climate and delta governance


Location: Blue Zone - Side Event Room 9

Co-organisers: ILC, YILAA, SPA, ACCARD Initiative

14.30H | Women and land

Strengthening resilience in LAC - Oportunidades, aprendizados e próximos passos pós AFCIA na implementação de projetos de investimentos de impacto, com foco em mulheres empreendedoras que impulsionam a inovação climática e a adaptação


Location: Spain Pavillion

Co-organisers: Plataforma Semiaridos, PNUD - AFCIA, Centro Sabiá

10.45H | Rangelands and food systems (ILC)

Valuing rangelands for the future as a climate action and food system


Location: Blue Zone, Food Action Hub,Official pavilion n° : PVE 156

Co-organisers: ILC, ILRI

13:30H | Energy transition and IPs

Does extractivism justify the energy transition? Lithium mining and threats to indigenous peoples: lessons learned


Location: Peoples’ Pavilion at COP30 (Green Zone)

Translation via Artificial Intelligence

12.50H | Indigenous women

Indigenous Women: Leading Adaptation from Amazonian Territories


Location: Blue Zone, Indigenous Pavilion

Co-organisers: AIDESEP

17H | Indigenous Peoples and climate science

From aspiration to concrete action: An Indigenous-led Policy Guide for the meaningful engagement of Indigenous Knowledge in climate science and policy


Location: Blue Zone - Indigenous Peoples Pavilion, Zone B. PV-D117

Co-organisers: Assembly of First Nations, IWGIA, Knowledge Justice Collective, United Nations Foundation.

15 November

13H | Rangelands and food systems (ILC)

Drums and Songs of Resistance, Forests of Life: Saamaka strategies to protect life and climate


Location: Peoples COP, Area externa cubierta Terreo, Travessa Piedade, 426, 66053-210, Reduto, Belém, Pará

Co-organisers: VSG, LandMark, ILC

14H | Youth and climate

Launch of Global Youth Roadmap, Climate Justice Statement, & Global Youth Network


Location: COP Village / ALDEA COP, Colégio Aplicação, Federal University of Pará (UFPA) – Avenida Perimetral, n°1000, Bairro Terra Firme

Co-organisers: RRI

11H | Farming and forestry

Collaborative Solutions for Transparency in Farming & Forestry, event organised under the COP30 Presidency Action Agenda


Location: Blue zone, Axis 3 Thematic Room

Co-organisers: World Rural Forum, WWF, FACT Dialogue, AFi, Huairou Commission and the Global Resilience Partnership

13H-17H | LandMark learning session (ILC)

LandMark Office Hour - Come a learn about LandMark


Location: Green Zone, Land Facility Booth

Co-organisers: ILC, LandMark

This is an open walk-in session. Participants are free to come in and learn about LandMark during the open hours.

17 November

13H | Land rights and data (ILC)

Spatial data platforms, AI, and rights: Strengthening Indigenous and Community Land Tenure


Location: Peoples COP, Sala 4 piso 1, Travessa Piedade, 426, 66053-210, Reduto, Belém, Pará

Co-organisers: ILC

11.30H | Land rights farmers (ILC)

Strengthening Inclusion of Family Farmers' Organisations in Climate Finance Facilities


Location: Blue Zone - Side Event Room 7

Co-organisers: AFA, ILC

14H | climate resilience

Semiáridos do Planeta: Água de Chuva, Convivência com os Biomas e resiliência climática.Contribuição dos povos dos semiáridos do Brasil, Chaco, Corredor Seco e Sahel.


Location: Blue zone,

Co-organisers: Articulação Semiárido Brasileiro, Plataforma Semiáridos AL, ROPPA

18 November

10H | Indigenous Peoples and climate

Indigenous Peoples Are the Protectors of Nature: Combating Climate Change and Protecting Biodiversity


Location: Blue zone, Indigenous Pavilion

Co-organisers: AIDESEP

19 November

10.45H | Farmers and climate adaptation

Farmers Roundtable: The Global Mutirão for Resilience: How family farmers lead global efforts on climate adaptation. Location:


Location: Blue Zone, Pavilion PV156, Action on Food Hub,

Co-organisers: World Rural Forum

13.45H | Family farming and food systems

Agricultura Familiar e Mutirão Climático: Liderança Global para Sistemas Alimentares Resilientes e Sustentáveis


Location: Brazil Pavilion, Blue Zone.

Co-organisers: The World Rural Forum in partnership with the Brazilian government

9.30H | Indigenous Peoples

Bioeconomy from Indigenous Peoples


Location: Amazonía Forever Pavilion, Goeldi Museum Chalet, Av. Governador Magalhães Barata, 376

Co-organisers: AIDESEP

12.40H | Youth and land

Rooted or Uprooted? Agrarian Youth, Climate Mobility and Resilient Rural Futures


Location: Auditorium A3- AgriZone

Co-organisers: YPARD Global

20 November

18.30 | Forest economies

Community-led forest economies: shifting policy and finance for people, nature and climate


Location: Side Event Room 7

Co-organisers: World Rural Forum, REFACOF, WRI, EDF, FSC

21 November

11H | Climate justice

Ríos Voladores: Ciencia y Cultura Amazónica hacia la Justicia Climática


Location: ARAYARA, Amazon Climate Hub

Co-organisers: Mesa de Empleabilidad y emprendimiento juvenil rural-MEEJR12

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Reach out to our colleagues at COP

We look forward to seeing you in Belém – together we can ensure that land rights are front and centre in climate action.

Johanna von Braun.png

Johanna von Braun

Lead, Climate and Nature, Indigenous Peoples
Katheryn

Katheryn Sánchez Baquero

Regional Coordinator | Latin America and the Caribbean
Amanda Segnini

Amanda Segnini

Land Rights Now Campaign Coordinator
Sara ramirez

Sara ramirez

LandMark Coordinator