This presentation is from the first in a series of seven online learning events for the East African Community region on Communities Combatting Illegal Wildlife Trade.
This presentation introduced participants to community engagement in tackling illegal wildlife trade and explored the ‘Local Communities: First Line of Defence against Illegal Wildlife Trade (FLoD)’ initiative, which aims to support designers and implementers of anti-poaching and anti-wildlife trafficking strategies and projects to effectively engage local communities as partners.
The events are organised by IUCN, together with the International Institute for Environment and Development and IUCN CEESP/SSC Sustainable Use and Livelihoods Specialist Group. The events are supported by USAID Kenya and East Africa through the Conserving Natural Capital and Enhancing Collaborative Management of Transboundary Resources (CONNECT) project (https://bit.ly/3cmHjBi), and will supplement the comprehensive training course on FLoD, which is currently under development with support from the BIOPAMA (https://bit.ly/300lwdT) programme supported by the European Union and the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States.
More details: https://www.iucn.org/regions/eastern-and-southern-africa/our-work/conservation-areas-and-species/local-communities-first-line-defence-against-illegal-wildlife-trade-flod
Communities Combatting Illegal Wildlife Trade: online learning series for the...IIED
This is a presentation from the second event of an online learning series for the East African Community region on communities combating illegal wildlife trade.
The event gave an introduction, overview and lessons learned on the ‘Local communities: First Line of Defence against Illegal Wildlife Trade (FLoD)’ initiative, which aims to support designers and implementers of anti-poaching and anti-wildlife trafficking strategies and projects to effectively engage local communities as partners.
The events are organised by IUCN, together with the International Institute for Environment and Development and IUCN CEESP/SSC Sustainable Use and Livelihoods Specialist Group. They are supported by USAID Kenya and East Africa through the Conserving Natural Capital and Enhancing Collaborative Management of Transboundary Resources (CONNECT) project, and will supplement the comprehensive training course on FLoD, which is currently under development with support from the BIOPAMA programme, supported by the European Union and the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States.
More details: https://www.iucn.org/regions/eastern-and-southern-africa/our-work/conservation-areas-and-species/local-communities-first-line-defence-against-illegal-wildlife-trade-flod
Communities Combatting Illegal Wildlife Trade: online learning series for the...IIED
This is a presentation from the third event of an online learning series for the East African Community region on communities combating illegal wildlife trade.
The event took participants through the first two steps of the ‘Local communities: First Line of Defence against Illegal Wildlife Trade (FLoD)’ methodology, which aims to support designers and implementers of anti-poaching and anti-wildlife trafficking strategies and projects to effectively engage local communities as partners.
The events are organised by IUCN, together with the International Institute for Environment and Development and IUCN CEESP/SSC Sustainable Use and Livelihoods Specialist Group. They are supported by USAID Kenya and East Africa through the Conserving Natural Capital and Enhancing Collaborative Management of Transboundary Resources (CONNECT) project, and will supplement the comprehensive training course on FLoD, which is currently under development with support from the BIOPAMA programme, supported by the European Union and the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States.
More information: https://www.iucn.org/regions/eastern-and-southern-africa/our-work/conservation-areas-and-species/local-communities-first-line-defence-against-illegal-wildlife-trade-flod
This is a presentation from the fourth event of an online learning series for the East African Community region on communities combating illegal wildlife trade.
The event took participants through the third step of the ‘Local communities: First Line of Defence against Illegal Wildlife Trade (FLoD)’ methodology, which aims to support designers and implementers of anti-poaching and anti-wildlife trafficking strategies and projects to effectively engage local communities as partners.
The events are organised by IUCN, together with the International Institute for Environment and Development and IUCN CEESP/SSC Sustainable Use and Livelihoods Specialist Group. They are supported by USAID Kenya and East Africa through the Conserving Natural Capital and Enhancing Collaborative Management of Transboundary Resources (CONNECT) project, and will supplement the comprehensive training course on FLoD, which is currently under development with support from the BIOPAMA programme, supported by the European Union and the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States.
More info: https://www.iucn.org/regions/eastern-and-southern-africa/our-work/conservation-areas-and-species/local-communities-first-line-defence-against-illegal-wildlife-trade-flod
This is a presentation from the fifth event of an online learning series for the East African Community region on communities combating illegal wildlife trade.
The event took participants through the fourth step of the ‘Local communities: First Line of Defence against Illegal Wildlife Trade (FLoD)’ methodology, which aims to support designers and implementers of anti-poaching and anti-wildlife trafficking strategies and projects to effectively engage local communities as partners.
The events are organised by IUCN, together with the International Institute for Environment and Development and IUCN CEESP/SSC Sustainable Use and Livelihoods Specialist Group. They are supported by USAID Kenya and East Africa through the Conserving Natural Capital and Enhancing Collaborative Management of Transboundary Resources (CONNECT) project, and will supplement the comprehensive training course on FLoD, which is currently under development with support from the BIOPAMA programme, supported by the European Union and the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States.
More info: https://www.iucn.org/regions/eastern-and-southern-africa/our-work/conservation-areas-and-species/local-communities-first-line-defence-against-illegal-wildlife-trade-flod
Ensuring Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) in REDD+CIFOR-ICRAF
This presentation by Grace Balawag was given at a session titled "Ensuring free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) in REDD+" at the Global Landscapes Forum in Lima, Peru, on December 6, 2014.
The session aimed to analyze the existing FPIC guidelines for REDD+ projects and the challenges of extending them to aid organizations and private businesses that are interested in REDD+.
Engaging with the Green Climate Fund: Experience from NepalAIDA_Americas
Presentation of Tunga Rai, Nepal Federation of Indigenous Nationalities (NEFIN), during the Session 3 of the GCF Watch international webinar series "Engaging with the GCF in different regions and countries".
This presentation by Yuki Sakamoto was given at a session titled "Ensuring free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) in REDD+" at the Global Landscapes Forum in Lima, Peru, on December 6, 2014.
The session aimed to analyze the existing FPIC guidelines for REDD+ projects and the challenges of extending them to aid organizations and private businesses that are interested in REDD+.
Communities Combatting Illegal Wildlife Trade: online learning series for the...IIED
This is a presentation from the second event of an online learning series for the East African Community region on communities combating illegal wildlife trade.
The event gave an introduction, overview and lessons learned on the ‘Local communities: First Line of Defence against Illegal Wildlife Trade (FLoD)’ initiative, which aims to support designers and implementers of anti-poaching and anti-wildlife trafficking strategies and projects to effectively engage local communities as partners.
The events are organised by IUCN, together with the International Institute for Environment and Development and IUCN CEESP/SSC Sustainable Use and Livelihoods Specialist Group. They are supported by USAID Kenya and East Africa through the Conserving Natural Capital and Enhancing Collaborative Management of Transboundary Resources (CONNECT) project, and will supplement the comprehensive training course on FLoD, which is currently under development with support from the BIOPAMA programme, supported by the European Union and the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States.
More details: https://www.iucn.org/regions/eastern-and-southern-africa/our-work/conservation-areas-and-species/local-communities-first-line-defence-against-illegal-wildlife-trade-flod
Communities Combatting Illegal Wildlife Trade: online learning series for the...IIED
This is a presentation from the third event of an online learning series for the East African Community region on communities combating illegal wildlife trade.
The event took participants through the first two steps of the ‘Local communities: First Line of Defence against Illegal Wildlife Trade (FLoD)’ methodology, which aims to support designers and implementers of anti-poaching and anti-wildlife trafficking strategies and projects to effectively engage local communities as partners.
The events are organised by IUCN, together with the International Institute for Environment and Development and IUCN CEESP/SSC Sustainable Use and Livelihoods Specialist Group. They are supported by USAID Kenya and East Africa through the Conserving Natural Capital and Enhancing Collaborative Management of Transboundary Resources (CONNECT) project, and will supplement the comprehensive training course on FLoD, which is currently under development with support from the BIOPAMA programme, supported by the European Union and the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States.
More information: https://www.iucn.org/regions/eastern-and-southern-africa/our-work/conservation-areas-and-species/local-communities-first-line-defence-against-illegal-wildlife-trade-flod
This is a presentation from the fourth event of an online learning series for the East African Community region on communities combating illegal wildlife trade.
The event took participants through the third step of the ‘Local communities: First Line of Defence against Illegal Wildlife Trade (FLoD)’ methodology, which aims to support designers and implementers of anti-poaching and anti-wildlife trafficking strategies and projects to effectively engage local communities as partners.
The events are organised by IUCN, together with the International Institute for Environment and Development and IUCN CEESP/SSC Sustainable Use and Livelihoods Specialist Group. They are supported by USAID Kenya and East Africa through the Conserving Natural Capital and Enhancing Collaborative Management of Transboundary Resources (CONNECT) project, and will supplement the comprehensive training course on FLoD, which is currently under development with support from the BIOPAMA programme, supported by the European Union and the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States.
More info: https://www.iucn.org/regions/eastern-and-southern-africa/our-work/conservation-areas-and-species/local-communities-first-line-defence-against-illegal-wildlife-trade-flod
This is a presentation from the fifth event of an online learning series for the East African Community region on communities combating illegal wildlife trade.
The event took participants through the fourth step of the ‘Local communities: First Line of Defence against Illegal Wildlife Trade (FLoD)’ methodology, which aims to support designers and implementers of anti-poaching and anti-wildlife trafficking strategies and projects to effectively engage local communities as partners.
The events are organised by IUCN, together with the International Institute for Environment and Development and IUCN CEESP/SSC Sustainable Use and Livelihoods Specialist Group. They are supported by USAID Kenya and East Africa through the Conserving Natural Capital and Enhancing Collaborative Management of Transboundary Resources (CONNECT) project, and will supplement the comprehensive training course on FLoD, which is currently under development with support from the BIOPAMA programme, supported by the European Union and the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States.
More info: https://www.iucn.org/regions/eastern-and-southern-africa/our-work/conservation-areas-and-species/local-communities-first-line-defence-against-illegal-wildlife-trade-flod
Ensuring Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) in REDD+CIFOR-ICRAF
This presentation by Grace Balawag was given at a session titled "Ensuring free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) in REDD+" at the Global Landscapes Forum in Lima, Peru, on December 6, 2014.
The session aimed to analyze the existing FPIC guidelines for REDD+ projects and the challenges of extending them to aid organizations and private businesses that are interested in REDD+.
Engaging with the Green Climate Fund: Experience from NepalAIDA_Americas
Presentation of Tunga Rai, Nepal Federation of Indigenous Nationalities (NEFIN), during the Session 3 of the GCF Watch international webinar series "Engaging with the GCF in different regions and countries".
This presentation by Yuki Sakamoto was given at a session titled "Ensuring free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) in REDD+" at the Global Landscapes Forum in Lima, Peru, on December 6, 2014.
The session aimed to analyze the existing FPIC guidelines for REDD+ projects and the challenges of extending them to aid organizations and private businesses that are interested in REDD+.
Responses to wildlife crime – how do the research findings compare to wider t...IIED
This is a presentation by Dilys Roe, biodiversity team leader of the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED).
It compares the project research findings on how best to reduce wildlife crime in Uganda, to international work on engaging with local communities to reduce wildlife crime. The project is the three-year project ‘Building capacity for pro-poor responses to wildlife crime in Uganda’.
Roe gave this presentation during the project’s research workshop, which was held in Kampala, Uganda, on 25 May 2016.
More information: http://www.iied.org/building-capacity-for-pro-poor-responses-wildlife-crime-uganda
FSC Free Prior Informed Consent in practiceCIFOR-ICRAF
This presentation by Alison von Ketteler was given at a session titled "Ensuring free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) in REDD+" at the Global Landscapes Forum in Lima, Peru, on December 6, 2014.
The session aimed to analyze the existing FPIC guidelines for REDD+ projects and the challenges of extending them to aid organizations and private businesses that are interested in REDD+.
This presentation is a compilation of four that were given on 30 November 2011 at an official UNFCCC COP17 side-event organised by CIFOR: 'How is REDD+ unfolding on the ground?'. The event discussed early insights on the capability of REDD+ projects to deliver on their goal of sequestering forest carbon while providing a range of co-benefits. The information presented draws mainly on findings of CIFOR's Global Comparative Study on REDD+, and covers the status and challenges of REDD+ projects on the ground;
challenges encountered in establishing REDD+ in Africa;
the policy and economic context in which REDD+ projects is unfolding; and
the status of monitoring, reporting and verification in setting up REDD+.
This presentation provides an overview to the CGIAR Systemwide Program on Collective Action and Property Rights (CAPRi). It includes a brief introduction to CAPRi, an update on CAPRi activities,
CAPRi impacts and partnerships, and ongoing CAPRi activities.
This presentation was given at a session titled "Ensuring free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) in REDD+" at the Global Landscapes Forum in Lima, Peru, on December 6, 2014.
The session aimed to analyze the existing FPIC guidelines for REDD+ projects and the challenges of extending them to aid organizations and private businesses that are interested in REDD+.
Research paper: Community Based Natural Resources Management in VietnamSPERI
This research paper will discuss the role of the community in natural resource management, particularly land and forest management and protection in Vietnam. The paper offers a discussion of environmental discourses that are related to the impacts of state land and forest management policies. Though ethnic communities in Vietnam have developed their knowledge and institutional systems in community natural resource management for a long time, communities were not recognized formally as one of the land users until 2003. Even then, though communities were identified as land users, few communities could attain land title. Those policies have had consequences with communities and their members facing shortages of land and forest. Nevertheless, those resources are essential for sustaining local people’s livelihoods, protecting forest, and keeping their cultural values.
The paper is organized in three main parts. The first summaries some key environmental discourses, especially ‘sustainable development’, and introduces concepts of culture, customary laws and community-based natural resource management. The second part deals with resource management and related legal framework in Vietnam. The third part illustrates the role of community in land and forest use and protection through a discussion of a Thai ethnic community in Vietnam
Growing forest partnerships and the investing in locally controlled initiativeCIFOR-ICRAF
Chris Buss
IUCN
Estebancio Castro Diaz
International Alliance of Indigenous and Tribal Peoples of Tropical Forests
Presentation for the conference on
Taking stock of smallholders and community forestry
Montpellier France
March 24-26, 2010
Wildlife crime in Uganda: how can we prevent it?IIED
This is a presentation by Geoffrey Mwedde, projects manager of the Wildlife Conservation Society, a project partner of the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED).
It presents the research findings of the intervention's most likely to be effective in reducing wildlife crime in Uganda.
This research was undertaken as part of the three-year project ‘Building capacity for pro-poor responses to wildlife crime in Uganda’.
Mwedde gave this presentation during the project’s research workshop, which was held in Kampala, Uganda, on 25 May 2016.
More information: http://www.iied.org/building-capacity-for-pro-poor-responses-wildlife-crime-uganda
Gender in the light of customary norms and statutes : the Ghana experience i...IIED
A presentation by Saadia Bobtoya, project officer for IUCN Ghana, at a workshop held in Paris from Thursday, 3 December to Friday, 4 December during the 21st Conference of the Parties (COP21).
The event organised by the International Institute for Environment and Development aimed to share the findings of its research to inform a wider debate on how REDD+ is contributing to addressing the drivers of land use and land use change.
The presentation focused on the Ghana experience in mainstreaming gender into REDD+.
More details: http://www.iied.org/redd-paris-what-could-be-it-for-people-forests
Landcare is an approach based on the notion of caring for your land as a community. The model is based on the values of community empowerment and collective action to develop and apply innovative solutions to natural resource management (NRM) challenges, networking farmers with the broader community and promoting sustainable land management practices
Responses to wildlife crime – how do the research findings compare to wider t...IIED
This is a presentation by Dilys Roe, biodiversity team leader of the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED).
It compares the project research findings on how best to reduce wildlife crime in Uganda, to international work on engaging with local communities to reduce wildlife crime. The project is the three-year project ‘Building capacity for pro-poor responses to wildlife crime in Uganda’.
Roe gave this presentation during the project’s research workshop, which was held in Kampala, Uganda, on 25 May 2016.
More information: http://www.iied.org/building-capacity-for-pro-poor-responses-wildlife-crime-uganda
FSC Free Prior Informed Consent in practiceCIFOR-ICRAF
This presentation by Alison von Ketteler was given at a session titled "Ensuring free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) in REDD+" at the Global Landscapes Forum in Lima, Peru, on December 6, 2014.
The session aimed to analyze the existing FPIC guidelines for REDD+ projects and the challenges of extending them to aid organizations and private businesses that are interested in REDD+.
This presentation is a compilation of four that were given on 30 November 2011 at an official UNFCCC COP17 side-event organised by CIFOR: 'How is REDD+ unfolding on the ground?'. The event discussed early insights on the capability of REDD+ projects to deliver on their goal of sequestering forest carbon while providing a range of co-benefits. The information presented draws mainly on findings of CIFOR's Global Comparative Study on REDD+, and covers the status and challenges of REDD+ projects on the ground;
challenges encountered in establishing REDD+ in Africa;
the policy and economic context in which REDD+ projects is unfolding; and
the status of monitoring, reporting and verification in setting up REDD+.
This presentation provides an overview to the CGIAR Systemwide Program on Collective Action and Property Rights (CAPRi). It includes a brief introduction to CAPRi, an update on CAPRi activities,
CAPRi impacts and partnerships, and ongoing CAPRi activities.
This presentation was given at a session titled "Ensuring free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) in REDD+" at the Global Landscapes Forum in Lima, Peru, on December 6, 2014.
The session aimed to analyze the existing FPIC guidelines for REDD+ projects and the challenges of extending them to aid organizations and private businesses that are interested in REDD+.
Research paper: Community Based Natural Resources Management in VietnamSPERI
This research paper will discuss the role of the community in natural resource management, particularly land and forest management and protection in Vietnam. The paper offers a discussion of environmental discourses that are related to the impacts of state land and forest management policies. Though ethnic communities in Vietnam have developed their knowledge and institutional systems in community natural resource management for a long time, communities were not recognized formally as one of the land users until 2003. Even then, though communities were identified as land users, few communities could attain land title. Those policies have had consequences with communities and their members facing shortages of land and forest. Nevertheless, those resources are essential for sustaining local people’s livelihoods, protecting forest, and keeping their cultural values.
The paper is organized in three main parts. The first summaries some key environmental discourses, especially ‘sustainable development’, and introduces concepts of culture, customary laws and community-based natural resource management. The second part deals with resource management and related legal framework in Vietnam. The third part illustrates the role of community in land and forest use and protection through a discussion of a Thai ethnic community in Vietnam
Growing forest partnerships and the investing in locally controlled initiativeCIFOR-ICRAF
Chris Buss
IUCN
Estebancio Castro Diaz
International Alliance of Indigenous and Tribal Peoples of Tropical Forests
Presentation for the conference on
Taking stock of smallholders and community forestry
Montpellier France
March 24-26, 2010
Wildlife crime in Uganda: how can we prevent it?IIED
This is a presentation by Geoffrey Mwedde, projects manager of the Wildlife Conservation Society, a project partner of the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED).
It presents the research findings of the intervention's most likely to be effective in reducing wildlife crime in Uganda.
This research was undertaken as part of the three-year project ‘Building capacity for pro-poor responses to wildlife crime in Uganda’.
Mwedde gave this presentation during the project’s research workshop, which was held in Kampala, Uganda, on 25 May 2016.
More information: http://www.iied.org/building-capacity-for-pro-poor-responses-wildlife-crime-uganda
Gender in the light of customary norms and statutes : the Ghana experience i...IIED
A presentation by Saadia Bobtoya, project officer for IUCN Ghana, at a workshop held in Paris from Thursday, 3 December to Friday, 4 December during the 21st Conference of the Parties (COP21).
The event organised by the International Institute for Environment and Development aimed to share the findings of its research to inform a wider debate on how REDD+ is contributing to addressing the drivers of land use and land use change.
The presentation focused on the Ghana experience in mainstreaming gender into REDD+.
More details: http://www.iied.org/redd-paris-what-could-be-it-for-people-forests
Landcare is an approach based on the notion of caring for your land as a community. The model is based on the values of community empowerment and collective action to develop and apply innovative solutions to natural resource management (NRM) challenges, networking farmers with the broader community and promoting sustainable land management practices
Vivian Onyango from FAO presented the voluntary guidelines on responsible governance of tenure of pastoral lands at the Partner's Meeting of the Pastoralist Knowledge Hub on April 3, 2017 at FAO in Rome, Italy.
http://www.fao.org/pastoralist-knowledge-hub/news/detail/en/c/879944/
Cop-PPLD and NGOs: Get Together to Focus on Livestock Development Issuescopppldsecretariat
Presentation from the Livestock Inter-Agency Donor Group (IADG) Meeting 2010. 4-5 May 2010 Italy, Rome IFAD Headquarters.
The event involved approximately 45 representatives from the international partner agencies to discuss critical needs for livestock development and research issues for the coming decade.
[ Originally posted on http://www.cop-ppld.net/cop_knowledge_base ]
In situ Conservation of Crop Wild Relatives in SADC Region – towards a region...ExternalEvents
In situ Conservation of Crop Wild Relatives in SADC Region – towards a regional CWR network
Ehsan Dulloo, Eve Allen, Prishnee Bissessur, Joana Magos Brehm, Hannes Gaisberger, Michelle Hammer, Yasmina Jaufeerally Fakim, Shelagh Kell, Jermina Matlou, Mpolokeng Mokoena, Nkat Maluleke, Graybill Munkombwe, Dickson Ng’uni, Livhuwani Nkuna, Domitilla Raimondo, Willem van Rensburg, Imke Thormann, Thabo Tjikana and Nigel Maxted
This presentation was prepared by Maz Robertson, projects coordinator, Uganda Conservation Foundation. It looks at putting the protected area wildlife crime actions plans into practice as part of the ‘Building capacity for pro-poor responses to wildlife crime in Uganda’ project.
The presentation was prepared for the final workshop of the project, which took place in Kampala in the first week of April 2017. The project was funded by the UK Government’s Illegal Wildlife Trade Challenge Fund from April 2014 to March 2017. It aimed to:
• Understand the current state of wildlife crime in Uganda, and investigate the underlying drivers of this crime
• Investigate the preferences of local people and conservation staff for different types of interventions aimed at addressing wildlife crime, and assess the likely impact of
• These interventions on local people’s attitudes and behaviour, and
• Develop new or improved approaches to increase the capacity of the Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA) to tackle wildlife crime more efficiently and effectively.
More information: https://www.iied.org/building-capacity-for-pro-poor-responses-wildlife-crime-uganda
Lessons Learned: Haiti Four Years After the Earthquake Kara Lightburn
Presented by Kara Lightburn, Executive Director of Social Tap, Inc on April 21st 2014 for the Yale Alumni Association of New York (YAANY)
Highlights our humanitarian model which has been developed over the course of the past 4 years being immersed in the Haitian society and our recommendations as an International Non-Governmental Organization (INGO) in order to ensure access to services for those most vulnerable and marganalized while building the capacity of communities and local organizations based on asset mapping and mobilization to build sustainability and decrease the dependency of AID in Haiti. Areas for volunteer and civil society involvement are also highlighted based on reciprocal long term relationships and knowledge sharing.
Community Activities means activity in the community, undertaken by your trustees, directors, employees or volunteers. Activity of community is the Community work involved in local or neighborhood groups or associations, volunteer or unpaid worker involved in a non-profit, not-for-profit, just work for humanity. Activity of community is including the alert, response, emergency, and recovery for an individual, groups, society as well as community.
What is livelihood?
What is Rural Livelihood?
Importance of Rural livelihood?
how to uplift the livelihood of Rural people?
Various measures to be taken to make the lives of rural people better
Mobility map
Linking Conservation, Equity and Poverty Alleviation
Understanding profiles and motivations of resource users and local perceptions of governance at Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda
First line of defence in tackling illegal wildlife crimeIIED
A presentation by Holly Dublin introducing the First Line of Defence (FLoD) initiative, which uses an interactive methodology underpinned by a theory of change approach, to help engage communities more directly in the design of projects aimed at tackling the illegal wildlife trade.
Dublin, a senior associate at the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED), highlights how the FLoD theory of change identifies four key approaches to effective community participation; this presentation focuses on one of these – decreasing the costs of living with wildlife.
The presentation was given at a webinar on community-based approaches to tackling poaching and illegal wildlife trade hosted by IIED on 30 March 2020.
More details: https://www.iied.org/iied-webinar-community-based-approaches-tackling-poaching-illegal-wildlife-trade
What are Rotary's International areas of focus? Find out more here. The McMinnville Rotary group is looking at these areas as well and considering how to incorporate them locally.
Introducing some ILRI and CGIAR activities in EthiopiaILRI
Presented by Siboniso Moyo, Barbara Wieland, Carlo Fadda (Bioversity International), Simon Langan (IWMI), Andrew Mude and Peter Ballantyne at the SDC visit to the ILRI Ethiopia campus, 16 July 2015
Women paying the health cost of the climate crisisIIED
The impacts of climate change result in both economic and non-economic losses and damages. While economic impacts often receive attention through policy and programming, the non-economic losses remain largely invisible and unaddressed, particularly in climate finance.
The presentation by IIED principal researcher Ritu Bharadwaj, from an online event in March 2024, focuses on the loss and damage faced by women battling drought, debt bondage and migration in Beed, India.
The presentation examines how women are disproportionately affected by climate change, looking at the connections between climate-induced droughts and debt bondage, and significant impacts on women's physical and mental health – leading to drastic health decisions.
It introduces the innovative C-CIQ methodology, which is a comprehensive approach allowing for in-depth assessment of climate change impacts, encompassing not only physical and economic aspects but also the social, cultural and psychological wellbeing of individuals and communities.
The C-CIQ methodology, with its emphasis on simplicity, replicability and clarity, aims to provide a framework for quantifying non-economic loss and damage through composite indices, making it a valuable tool for practitioners and policymakers in diverse contexts.
More information: https://www.iied.org/women-paying-health-cost-climate-crisis
This report provides an overview of the International Institute for Environment and Development's carbon emissions for 2022/23, and details plans to reduce its impact across our operations.
Emphasising transparency and accountability, the report underscores IIED's dedication to creating a more sustainable and equitable world.
The report highlights ways IIED has changed to reduce its environmental impact and promote positive changes in social, financial and governance operations.
As an organisation IIED is committed to becoming a net-zero organisation, aligning with science-based targets and reflecting short- and long-term emission reduction targets, which will be monitored annually.
Summary presentation on the case study on approaches for supporting pastorali...IIED
This is a presentation of the report 'Case study on approaches for supporting pastoralists groups facing climate change effects in Tanzania'.
Published June 2015
Further information: https://www.iied.org/climate-learning-partnership
Cities for refugees: places of economic productivity, participation and wellb...IIED
This is a presentation by Lucy Earle, director of the Human Settlements research group at the International Institute for Environment and Development, showing results of research into protracted displacement in an urban world.
The presentation was given on 6 December 2022.
This presentation (in English and French) was delivered during an IIED webinar on Wednesday, 21 September, which discussed the topic of special economic zones and the broader questions they raise, particularly in Senegal and Madagascar.
This presentation was delivered by Mamy Rakotondrainibe, president of the collective for the Defense of Malagasy Land (TANY). TANY is a civil society organisation that fights against land grabs that affect citizens and farmers in Madagascar.
More information: https://www.iied.org/special-economic-zones-global-trends-issues-senegal-madagascar
Special economic zones in Senegal: characteristics, land ans socio-economic i...IIED
This presentation (in English and French) was delivered during an IIED webinar on Wednesday, 21 September, which discussed the topic of special economic zones and the broader questions they raise, particularly in Senegal and Madagascar.
This presentation was delivered by Dr Alpha Ba, lecturer and researcher at the École Nationale Supérieure d'Agriculture (ENSA), University of Thiès. Alpha holds a PhD in Sociology. As a consultant specialised in agricultural, land, gender and human rights issues, he has more than 15 years of experience and has accompanied many public organisations in Senegal, as well as NGOs and international institutions, in research and training sessions on those topics.
More information: https://www.iied.org/special-economic-zones-global-trends-issues-senegal-madagascar
Investment zones in Madagascar: characteristics and land implicationsIIED
This presentation (in English and French) was delivered during an IIED webinar on Wednesday, 21 September, which discussed the topic of special economic zones and the broader questions they raise, particularly in Senegal and Madagascar.
This presentation was delivered by Dr Perrine Burnod and Heriniaina Rakotomalala, respectively researcher at CIRAD; and land expert and PhD candidate at the Institut d’Agro from Montpellier and Antananarivo University.
More information: https://www.iied.org/special-economic-zones-global-trends-issues-senegal-madagascar
Special economic zones and land tenure: global trends and local impacts in Se...IIED
This presentation (in English and French) was delivered during an IIED webinar on Wednesday, 21 September, which discussed the topic of special economic zones and the broader questions they raise, particularly in Senegal and Madagascar.
This presentation is by Lorenzo Cotula, principal researcher and head of law, economies and justice programme in IIED's Natural Resources research group, and Thierry Berger, associate (law, economies and justice programme) in IIED's Natural Resources research group.
More information: https://www.iied.org/special-economic-zones-global-trends-issues-senegal-madagascar
Adaptability of peri-urban agricultural workers towards resilienceIIED
This case study highlights the way that women working in peri-urban agriculture in India have to adapt to changing circumstances in order to sustain themselves and their families.
It was produced by Siddharth Agarwal, Kanupriya Kothiwal, Shabnam Verma and Sampurna Kundu of the Urban Health Resource Centre, India.
Conclusions include agricultural work being one of the major forms of livelihood for peri-urban workers. Many peri-urban workers chose this form of work because they already had the skills from their native rural farms.
Women find agricultural work convenient because of its self-paced nature and because farms are mostly close to where they live. Food security is another benefit, as many women are able to procure vegetables and food grains from their farming work.
Peri-urban women workers are resilient, adapting to an ever-changing peri-urban ecosystem and often pursuing an additional livelihood in seasons when agricultural work is not available. Their strategy of forming links with more than one employer offering different forms of work is key to this resilience.
They are also preparing themselves for a future when farms will be sold to developers and builders, and express anxiety about the uncertainty of sustaining agriculture work in the future.
The adaptability and resilience shown by the workers can be tailored to other situations and promoted among vulnerable urban women workers.
More information: https://www.iied.org/resilience-through-flexibility-story-peri-urban-agricultural-workers-india
Stitching their trajectories with determination: stories from Indore, IndiaIIED
Many women in Indore work as informal home-based garment workers. This case study demonstrates their commitment to investing in equipment and learning new skills in order to contribute to the family income.
Behind closed doors lies a vast segment of largely invisible women and girls working in India’s flourishing garment industry.
Women working from home account for about 14% of urban employment in India. In low- and middle-income countries, outsourced garment production thrives on account of cheap labour to keep the levels of production high and costs low.
Through pursuing sewing, women can overcome the limitations of little or no education or formal training. Most women stitchers enhance their skills through experience. This helps them get regular and progressively higher paying piece-rate work.
More information: https://www.iied.org/stitching-determination-stories-women-garment-workers-indore-india
Improving strategy and uptake of cleaner cooking in Kitui, KenyaIIED
This presentation contains a brief overview of work to understand households’ cooking needs that can help improve the uptake of improved cooking devices and promote gender justice in the cooking space.
The presentation is by Enzo Leone, a researcher in the Shaping Sustainable Markets research group at the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED).
IIED is working with Caritas Kitui, Access to Energy Institute (A2EI), African Centre for Technology Studies (ACTS) and Modern Energy Cooking Services (MECS).
More information: https://www.iied.org/tailored-cooking-solutions-close-gender-gap
Placing COVID-19 and the wildlife trade within the bigger pictureIIED
This presentation by EJ Milner-Gulland was delivered during the online event 'Why eat wild meat? Insights from Africa and lessons for COVID-19 responses' on Wednesday, 4 August.
The event explored why people eat wild meat and how to design interventions that can help improve sustainability and safety.
EJ Milner-Gulland is director of the Interdisciplinary Centre for Conservation Science at University of Oxford.
Impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on wild meat use and perception in communiti...IIED
This presentation by Cedric Thibaut Kamogne Tagne was delivered during the online event 'Why eat wild meat? Insights from Africa and lessons for COVID-19 responses' on Wednesday, 4 August.
The event explored why people eat wild meat and how to design interventions that can help improve sustainability and safety.
Cedric Thibaut Kamogne Tagne is a researcher at the Fondation Camerounaise de la Terre Vivante (FCTV) in Cameroon.
Drivers of wild meat consumption steph brittainIIED
This presentation by Stephanie Brittain was delivered during the online event 'Why eat wild meat? Insights from Africa and lessons for COVID-19 responses' on Wednesday, 4 August.
The event explored why people eat wild meat and how to design interventions that can help improve sustainability and safety.
Stephanie Brittain is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Oxford focusing on local knowledge and drivers of wild meat consumption in Cameroon.
This presentation by Stephanie Brittain was delivered during the online event 'Why eat wild meat? Insights from Africa and lessons for COVID-19 responses' on Wednesday, 4 August.
The event explored why people eat wild meat and how to design interventions that can help improve sustainability and safety.
Stephanie Brittain is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Oxford focusing on local knowledge and drivers of wild meat consumption in Cameroon.
Multifaceted approach to transition from emergency aid and rehabilitation to ...IIED
Because adaption is not just about addressing vulnerability to climate-related disasters but is also about reducing the economic, social and political vulnerabilities that exacerbate the former, Friendship has developed an integrated and holistic approach that allows transition of vulnerable communities from emergency aid dependence or disaster relief to their development and resilience.
This presentation was submitted by Stéphane Van Haute, of Friendship, and features as part of the Marketplace area of the 15th International Conference on Community-based Adaptation (CBA15). The event takes place online from 14-18 June, 2021.
More details: https://cba15.iied.org/
Sociétés Coopératives de cacao et Différentiel du revenu Décent : Leçons de l...IIED
This presentation was made by Pauline Zei at a webinar on Wednesday, 2 June that discussed the challenges around, and opportunities for, producer voice and agency in the design and implementation of the new Living Income Differential (LID) in Ghana and the Côte d'Ivoire.
The online event on 'Cocoa producer agency and the living income differential: lessons from civil society organisations' was organised by the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED).
Zei is director of Inades-Formation Cote d'Ivoire. She holds a degree in agronomy from the Institut National Polytechnique Félix Houphouët Boigny in Yamoussoukro, specialising in crop protection. Inades-Formation is a network of pan-African associations that works for equitable and sustainable development in Africa.
This was the seventh in a series of events organised under the IIED-led Empowering Producers in Commercial Agriculture (EPIC) project.
EPIC is funded by the UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office through its Commercial Agriculture for Smallholders and Agribusiness (CASA) programme, though the views expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of the UK government. CASA seeks to increase economic opportunities for smallholders by demonstrating the commercial viability of businesses with significant smallholder supply chains and attracting more investment into the sector.
More details: https://www.iied.org/cocoa-producer-agency-living-income-differential-lessons-civil-society-organisations
Innovating to improve the ownership, sustainability and multi-actor nature of...IIED
This presentation by Stephen Bright Sakwa, of Tree Adoption Uganda, features the 'Waste management for flood control' project which is being implemented in Bwaise, an urban slum in Kampala, Uganda.
It focuses on tackling floods and creating livelihoods in informal settlements. It showcases how the community has been trained to manage waste appropriately and make valuable products out of it so that it doesn't end up in drainage channels to cause floods that devastates the community.
This presentation features as part of the Marketplace area of the 15th International Conference on Community-based Adaptation (CBA15). The event takes place online from 14-18 June, 2021.
More details: https://cba15.iied.org/atrium
This is a presentation from the final event of an online learning series for the East African Community region on communities combating illegal wildlife trade.
The event discussed the future of the ‘Local communities: First Line of Defence against Illegal Wildlife Trade (FLoD)’ methodology, which aims to support designers and implementers of anti-poaching and anti-wildlife trafficking strategies and projects to effectively engage local communities as partners.
The events are organised by IUCN, together with the International Institute for Environment and Development and IUCN CEESP/SSC Sustainable Use and Livelihoods Specialist Group. They are supported by USAID Kenya and East Africa through the Conserving Natural Capital and Enhancing Collaborative Management of Transboundary Resources (CONNECT) project, and will supplement the comprehensive training course on FLoD, which is currently under development with support from the BIOPAMA programme, supported by the European Union and the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States.
More information: https://www.iucn.org/regions/eastern-and-southern-africa/our-work/conservation-areas-and-species/local-communities-first-line-defence-against-illegal-wildlife-trade-flod
Organisational innovations that make community forestry prosperousIIED
This is a presentation by Duncan MacQueen, principal researcher at the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED), about the importance of including smallholder producers and producer organisations in sustainable value chains to strengthen local resilience to external shocks.
Macqueen used the example of his work with the Forest and Farm Facility (FFF) program at the FTA Science Conference 2020. The presentation focuses on the role of commercial organisation around accountable finance systems at four tiered levels: local producer groups, regional aggregators and processors, national advocacy federations, international alliances.
More details: https://www.iied.org/locally-controlled-forestry
Characterization and the Kinetics of drying at the drying oven and with micro...Open Access Research Paper
The objective of this work is to contribute to valorization de Nephelium lappaceum by the characterization of kinetics of drying of seeds of Nephelium lappaceum. The seeds were dehydrated until a constant mass respectively in a drying oven and a microwawe oven. The temperatures and the powers of drying are respectively: 50, 60 and 70°C and 140, 280 and 420 W. The results show that the curves of drying of seeds of Nephelium lappaceum do not present a phase of constant kinetics. The coefficients of diffusion vary between 2.09.10-8 to 2.98. 10-8m-2/s in the interval of 50°C at 70°C and between 4.83×10-07 at 9.04×10-07 m-8/s for the powers going of 140 W with 420 W the relation between Arrhenius and a value of energy of activation of 16.49 kJ. mol-1 expressed the effect of the temperature on effective diffusivity.
Artificial Reefs by Kuddle Life Foundation - May 2024punit537210
Situated in Pondicherry, India, Kuddle Life Foundation is a charitable, non-profit and non-governmental organization (NGO) dedicated to improving the living standards of coastal communities and simultaneously placing a strong emphasis on the protection of marine ecosystems.
One of the key areas we work in is Artificial Reefs. This presentation captures our journey so far and our learnings. We hope you get as excited about marine conservation and artificial reefs as we are.
Please visit our website: https://kuddlelife.org
Our Instagram channel:
@kuddlelifefoundation
Our Linkedin Page:
https://www.linkedin.com/company/kuddlelifefoundation/
and write to us if you have any questions:
info@kuddlelife.org
WRI’s brand new “Food Service Playbook for Promoting Sustainable Food Choices” gives food service operators the very latest strategies for creating dining environments that empower consumers to choose sustainable, plant-rich dishes. This research builds off our first guide for food service, now with industry experience and insights from nearly 350 academic trials.
Natural farming @ Dr. Siddhartha S. Jena.pptxsidjena70
A brief about organic farming/ Natural farming/ Zero budget natural farming/ Subash Palekar Natural farming which keeps us and environment safe and healthy. Next gen Agricultural practices of chemical free farming.
2. Welcome and opening remarks
• Jean Baptiste Havugimana - Director Productive Sectors
(DPS), East African Community Secretariat
• Charles Oluchina, Programme Coordinator, IUCN Eastern and
Southern Africa Regional Office
• Aurelia Micko, Environment Office Director, USAID Kenya and
East Africa
• Dr. Philippe Mayaux, Team Leader, Biodiversity and
Ecosystem Services, European Commission, DEVCO
3. Introduction to community engagement in combatting
illegal wildlife trade
Policy context for engaging local
communities
Dr Dilys Roe
• IIED Principal Researcher and Biodiversity
Team Leader
• Chair, IUCN SULi
From policy to practice
Dr Holly Dublin
• IUCN ESARO Senior Adviser
• IIED Senior Associate
• IUCN SULi
Case studies and introduction to the
People Not Poaching platform
Liv Wilson-Holt
• IIED Researcher, Biodiversity
5. African Elephant Summit (2013)
London Declaration (2014)
Kasane Declaration (2015)
Brazzaville Declaration (2015)
UNGA Resolution 69/314 (2015)
SDG Targets 15.7 & 15.c (2015)
Hanoi Declaration (2016)
UNEA Resolution 2.14 (2016)
UNGA Resolution 71/326 (2017)
LONDON CONFERENCE 2018
ENGAGING LOCAL COMMUNITIES IN
COMBATTING IWT
Lots of policy rhetoric on
community engagement ….
6. Four key pillars of international
IWT PolicyEradicatemarket
forillegalproducts
Buildeffective
legalframeworks
Strengthenlaw
enforcement
Supportsustainable
livelihoods
STOP ILLEGAL WILDLIFE TRADE
7. Community commitments
made…
• Tackle negative impacts of IWT on people
• Support sustainable livelihood opportunities
• Support community-led conservation
• Recognise community rights to benefit from
wildlife
• Involve local people as law enforcement
partners
• Reduce the costs of living with wildlife
• Support information sharing about
community-based approaches
8. Kenya: National elephant
strategy 2012-2021
• Identify ways to increase the value of elephants to
communities
• Provide tangible benefits that are directly linked to the
presence of elephants
• Devolve rights and responsibilities to communities
• Engage communities to work with KWS as partners
and informants
• Increase opportunities for alternative livelihood options
• Develop elephant-friendly land use initiatives and
wildlife-friendly investment opportunities
• Implement a variety of different approaches to mitigate
HWC and encourage coexistence
9. Rwanda: Wildlife policy 2013
• Promote and support community conservation
initiatives
• Support devolved wildlife management
institutions
• Implement measures to mitigate and respond
to human wildlife conflict
10. South Sudan: NBSAP 2018
• Develop community-based conservation strategies
that promote sustainable use of wildlife
• Assess and build management strategies based
on traditional conservation practices
• Secure access and use of rights for communities
• Build capacity for communities to develop skills in
wildlife protection
• Forge a special relationship between wildlife
authorities and communities
11. Tanzania:Wildlife Conservation
(WMA) Regulations 2012
• Supporting communities to benefit from and
have ownership of wildlife through WMAs:
• Grant community-based organisations the right
to manage WMAs
• Facilitate the training of Village Game Scouts
• Address HWC
12. Uganda: Community
Conservation Policy 2020
• Strengthen community conservation in
management of wildlife resources inside and
outside the PAs
• Enhance equitable sharing of wildlife benefits with
local communities,
• Promote sustainable wildlife-based enterprises
• Address human-wildlife conflicts.
• Strengthen partnerships between government,
private sector, NGOs, local communities in wildlife
conservation initiatives.
• Mainstream local communities in wildlife crime
management.
26. 1. Relying on law enforcement to stop poaching
difficult, expensive, and only rarely effective
• Wildlife is on community land:
• 1/4 of Earth’s land managed
by communities, 40% of
formal conservation areas
• Community members live with
and near wildlife - often involved
in poaching
• Best-resourced law enforcement
will struggle without community
buy-in
27. 2. Communities have borne costs of conservation:
its unjust for anti-IWT efforts to worsen this
• historical dispossession and
exclusion
• anti-poaching efforts often
target IPLCs, often unjustly
• loss of livelihood options
through tightened access to
wild resources
• massive social impacts of
killing and incarceration of
young men, loss of livelihood
assets to pay fines
• human rights abuses
28. 3. Empowering communities and increasing the value
of wildlife to them can have much broader conservation
benefits
Habitat loss and degradation remains primary
threat even for many species impacted by IWT…
…retaliatory killing for human-wildlife
conflict can also be reduced
Community-based approaches can build support for wildlife as
a land use and tolerance for its impacts more broadly
29. 4. Communities can be powerful and positive agents in
combatting IWT
Know what is happening on the ground –
can be “eyes and ears” of enforcement
Highly motivated when have stewardship
rights and / or when gain tangible
benefits from conservation
Now many powerful examples of
communities taking lead themselves or
forming effective partnerships with
authorities
30. 5. It is not just about benefits but also about reducing
costs
• Even where benefits are
accrued communities do
not tolerate continued
conflict well
• In some cases
communities may prefer
physical separation but this
can cause other ecological
impacts
31. 6. Many projects to date have failed to stem IWT
Resulting in flawed assumptions
Leading to sometimes deeply flawed Theories of Change underpinning project design
No engagement with communities from the start
Photo credits: A. Vishwanath
33. The Basic Equation
BENEFITS
FROM
CONSERVING
WILDLIFE
COSTS OF
CONSERVING
WILDLIFE
BENEFITS
FROM
ENGAGING IN
IWT
COSTS OF
ENGAGING IN
IWT>
Photo credits: H. Dublinfrom Cooney et al 2016 Conservation Letters
NET BENEFITS OF CONSERVING NET BENEFITS OF POACHING>
36. Enabling actions
Enabling actions
• Support development and implementation of
legal & institutional frameworks for effective &
fair wildlife protection and management
• Fight corruption and strengthen governance
• Build community skills and capacity
• Better compare & contrast costs & benefits at
individual & community levels
37. DECREASED PRESSURE ON SPECIES FROM
ILLEGAL WILDLIFE TRADE
.
Four Primary Pathways
A.
Increase
costs of
participating
in IWT
C.
Decrease
costs of
living with
wildlife
D.
Increase
non-wildlife-
based
livelihoods
B.
Increase
incentives
for
stewardship
38. Connecting pathways to the equation
• Pathway A – increase disincentives / decrease incentives –> decreases
the net benefits of poaching
• Pathways B and C – increase incentives for stewardship and decrease
costs of living with wildlife –> increases the net benefits of conservation
• Pathway D – non-wildlife livelihoods –> reduces dependence on
conservation and on IWT
NET BENEFITS OF CONSERVING NET BENEFITS OF POACHING>
39. Community engagement and truly
“listening” is key to success
Hi Folks!
This Dude is a member of camp staff at Larsens Camp in Samburu game reserve:
A true example of African appropriate technology in action, the hands-free kit:
Salaams,
Alex
42. People not Poaching: Community
based approaches to tackling IWT
Part of IIED led project: Learning and Action for
Community Engagement against IWT (LeAP).
Funded by the UK Government’s IWT Challenge
Fund.
People not Poaching (PnP) is a learning
platform designed to build a global evidence
base of case studies to understand how
communities are engaged in tackling IWT.
We want to understand what works, what
doesn’t work – and most importantly why – in
initiatives that have involved communities in
anti-poaching activities.
https://www.peoplenotpoaching.org/
43. We have 18 case studies from the
East African Community region
The majority of these are from Kenya and Tanzania
and nearly all focus on charismatic mammal
species, such as elephants, rhinos and lions.
Common approaches include:
• Supporting community-based ranger
programmes
• Catalysing informal intelligence networks
• Facilitating land lease payments
• Supporting alternative livelihoods
• Reducing human-wildlife conflict
• Educating and raising awareness
44. These initiatives have had
some great successes
• Case studies have managed to reduce poaching – some by over 50% in their
project area.
• Many initiatives have achieved positive results in increased income – from
tourism revenue or alternative livelihood programmes.
• Implementing financial, preventative and reactive measures have also led to
reductions in human-wildlife conflict incidents and revenge killings.
• Communities have access to better education, healthcare and sanitation
services.
45. Lessons learned include the need
to develop projects from the
bottom-up
Local people must buy in to an idea, rather than be
forced into it – even though this can take a lot more
time
Important not to over promise – promising less and
delivering more
Spend time building relationships – community
engagement can’t just be one-off events
Leverage expertise through multi-stakeholder
partnerships
46. Challenges include sustainability
and access to long-term funding
Developing long-
term sustainable
solutions
Achieving equal
participation of
men and women
Historical
grievances
Inadequate
benefits
Lack of flexibility
Sheer
scale of
the
problem
49. People not Poaching has a
range of other features
• Resources
• Country profiles with relevant policies,
strategies and legislation
• Events
50. We are always looking for new
case studies!
Head to our contribute page or get in touch at
peoplenotpoaching@gmail.com
Follow us on social media
• Twitter @CommunitiesIWT
• Facebook @peoplenotpoaching
Sign up to our newsletter on our home page:
peoplenotpoaching.org
Diane – Not sure if we are to have presenter names on these or what this slide should say for each talk – please just standardize as you see fit.
Not a lack of commitments
Of the four pillars, the pillar on livelihoods was the least well reported on both in terms of the numbers of countries reporting and what they reported
Slide simply there to show how few countries reports and the patchiness of reporting.
Demand reduction, legal frameworks and law enforcement all had far more countries reporting and reporting more progress
Of the four pillars, the pillar on livelihoods was the least well reported on both in terms of the numbers of countries reporting and what they reported
Slide simply there to show how few countries reports and the patchiness of reporting.
Demand reduction, legal frameworks and law enforcement all had far more countries reporting and reporting more progress
First graph shows an analysis of funding for IWT between 2010 and 2016 conducted by the World Bank. From the $1.3 billion funding identified by the World Bank as having been allocated to IWT, 65% was allocated to activities related to protected area management and law enforcement and only 13% to supporting sustainable use and livelihoods.
Second image shows an analysis conducted by IIED of projects funded since 2016. It shows law enforcement was included in 83% compared to 33% on livelihoods.
Diane – Not sure if we are to have presenter names on these or what this slide should say for each talk – please just standardize as you see fit.
IUCN along with the rest of the conservation community has for a long been extremely concerned about the high levels of poaching in recent years, especially of high value species, such as elephants and rhino and the illegal trade in ivory and rhino horn
There is no simple solution to tackling illegal wildlife trade. Emerging initiatives usually adopt multiple approaches that can be broadly categorised into three different but mutually supportive types.
To date, however, law enforcement has received far greater attention than other strategies and has been applied in ways that, in some cases, have had worrying social consequences etc
even best-resourced enforcement efforts will struggle where they do not have the support of the people living with wildlife
Where these are heavy handed, or misdirected
Recent Buzzfeed expose of WWF activities in Cameroon and India shows the reputational risk to conservation NGOs
Where these are heavy handed, or misdirected
Recent Buzzfeed expose of WWF activities in Cameroon and India shows the reputational risk to conservation NGOs
Communities assess this
SWITCH TO DILYS
Developed a new methodology to help enable the voices and perspectives of local communities to be heard
Diane – Not sure if we are to have presenter names on these or what this slide should say for each talk – please just standardize as you see fit.