11/10/2025
14:00 - 14:45
Human-Centred Conservation Pavilion
, Presencial
Por qué asistir
Conservation often celebrates communities as custodians, but rarely as true decision-makers. This panel explores what happens when Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities hold real authority over land and resources—and what changes when rights become the foundation, not the afterthought, of conservation and climate action.
Descripción de la sesión
Communities worldwide are too often included in conservation as “participants” while real authority remains elsewhere. This panel brings together leaders from Africa and North America to ask: what does conservation look like when rights are central? Panellists will share experiences of legal recognition, governance authority, and customary systems that move beyond benefit-sharing to genuine stewardship. They will also confront hard questions: the risks of tokenistic inclusion, the trade-offs of land and resource rights, and the responsibilities that come with authority. Expect a provocative discussion on how Human-Centred Conservation can align justice, rights, and ecological integrity.Organised by
Jamma International ( United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland )
Asociaciones
Confederated Tribe of Warm Springs
African Community Resource Rights Association
Nyae Nyae Conservancy
Lifescapes Project
Speaker
Branch of Natural Resources Director, Wild Sheep Foundation - Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs
Moderator
Chairman, Alliance for Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities for Conservation in Africa (AICA)