Giving Compass' Take:
- More Indigenous communities worldwide are getting legal recognition of community land rights.
- How can donors advocate for land recognition rights? How do land rights help strengthen Indigenous autonomy and honor Native wisdom?
- Read more about protecting Indigenous land rights.
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Between 2015 and 2020, Indigenous and Afro-descendant peoples, along with small, local communities in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, gained legal recognition to more than 247 million acres of land — an 85 percent increase. That’s according to a new report from Rights and Resources Initiative, a global nonprofit focused on land and resource rights.
Researchers covered 73 countries and found that rights holders now hold title to more than 11 percent of Earth’s land — a combined area larger than Egypt. However, in 49 of the countries studied, more than 3 million acres of Indigenous, Afro-descendant, and local lands have not been recognized by governments. That means communities have limited rights of access and have no rights to manage or prevent third parties from entering their lands. In some cases, lack of documentation in land claims can leave communities vulnerable to inconsistent and violent expulsion policies by local officials, making it difficult to reach resolutions, due process, or receive just compensation for oppressive tactics carried out by governments, companies, or individuals.
Multiple studies have shown that Indigenous peoples are some of the best managers and protectors of the environment and that rights-based approaches could be critical to curbing the effects of climate change.
“There’s a need for donors to invest in funding advocacy for legal commissions and directly supporting communities so they can secure their rights,” said Solange Bandiaky-Badji, coordinator of Rights and Resources Initiative. “But governments need to put in implementation and regulation mechanisms so we can increase the number of areas under the ownership of local communities and Indigenous peoples.”
According to the report, sub-Saharan Africa saw the biggest increase in legal recognition of community land rights, gaining nearly 87 million acres, and largely driven by efforts in Kenya and Liberia to recognize communities’ customary lands. In 2016, Kenya’s government implemented the Community Land Act, which led to engaging with the government and rights holders to figure out the best way to implement the “progressive provisions of the recognition of the rights on the ground,” said Bandiaky-Badji. Liberia passed the Land Rights Act in 2018, which recognized traditional lands and launched a land process to partner with local community organizations and networks to recognize customary land rights.
Read the full article about Indigenous land back by Lyric Aquino at Grist.