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Forest Preservation in a Changing Climate - REDD+ and indigenous and community rights in Indonesia and Tanzania

Auteur
Jodoin S.
Date
2017
Source
IUCN (ID: MON-093383)
Éditeur | Lieu de publication
Cambridge University Press | Cambridge, United Kingdom
ISBN
978-1-107-18900-3
Pages
270 p.
Type du document
Monographie/livre
Langue
Anglais
Pays/Territoire
Indonésie, Tanzanie, Rép.-Unie de
Sujet
Forêts, Air et atmosphère
Mot clé
Gestion forestière/conservation des forêts Gestion communautaire Droits traditionnels/droits coutumiers Populations autochtones Changement de climat
Résumé

This book provides a comprehensive examination of how REDD+ programmes, policies, and projects have affected the rights of Indigenous Peoples and local communities in developing countries. It provides a brief history of the origins and evolution of REDD+ and offers legal analysis of the standards set by multilateral initiatives (UNFCCC, UN-REDD, and FCPF) and certification programmes (CCBA and REDD SES). Most of the book is dedicated qualitative case studies of the human rights implications of national REDD+ programmes and local REDD+ projects in Indonesia and Tanzania. The comparison between these two countries is especially fruitful in highlighting the range of implications, both positive and negative, that the pursuit of REDD+ may hold for Indigenous and local communities and the ways in which legal, environmental, economic, and political factors may affect the human rights outcomes of REDD+ activities at the national and local levels.

Site web
www.cambridge.org