Giving Compass' Take:
- Steven Grattan examines how Columbia set a precedent for Indigenous self-government and environmental protection in Amazon territories.
- How can other governments in Latin America and across the world follow Columbia's lead in formalizing Indigenous local governments, furthering environmental protection?
- Learn more about key issues facing Indigenous communities and how you can help.
- Search our Guide to Good for nonprofits focused on Indigenous communities in your area.
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Colombia this week took a leading position in Latin America for Indigenous Indigenous self-government and forest protection by formalizing Indigenous local governments across swaths of the Amazon, raising hopes that other countries in the region will follow its lead.
Activists say Monday’s decision gives Indigenous communities not just land titles, but actual self-governing authority — complete with public budgets and administrative power. The process, underway since 2018, now has a legal framework enabling Indigenous councils to function as official local governments.
“This puts Colombia in the lead when it comes to recognizing Indigenous rights — not just to land, but to identity, autonomy, and decision-making over their own development,” said Mayu Velasco Anderson, head of the Peru and Colombia program at nongovernmental organization Rainforest Foundation Norway.
Patricia Suárez, Indigenous leader and adviser to the National Organization of Indigenous Peoples of the Colombian Amazon, called the presidential decree “historic.”
“We have been seeking recognition of our autonomy and self-determination as Indigenous Territorial Entities for over 30 years,” Suárez said, regarding Indigenous self-government in the Amazon. “This progress is a milestone in the consolidation of the rights of Indigenous Peoples as autonomous governments.”
In contrast, other Latin American countries typically only grant land titles. Brazil, for example, has extensive Indigenous territories that frequently intersect multiple municipalities, forcing communities to navigate conflicting public systems and undermining their self-governance.
“In Brazil, even demarcated and regularized Indigenous lands fall under the administrative boundaries of states and municipalities, and communities depend on these governments to access public policies,” said Inés Luna Maira, head of institutional partnerships at Rainforest Foundation Norway. “They have to deal with a patchwork of public systems and elected officials that don’t reflect Indigenous governance.”
Suriname, home to some of the most intact forests and Indigenous and Maroon communities, lags furthest behind other nations in the region on this issue.
Colombia’s new framework gives Indigenous groups direct authority over their territories, streamlining governance and boosting protections for forests that are critical to combating climate change.
Read the full article about Indigenous self-government in the Amazon by Steven Grattan at The Associated Press.