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Showing posts with label Legal Empowerment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Legal Empowerment. Show all posts

Saturday, 9 November 2013

ICCA meeting for Southern and East Africa discusses ICCA examples from the region

Posted on 04:19 by Unknown
On 8 November Natural Justice and the ICCA Consortium co-convened a meeting near Cape Town, South Africa, on Indigenous Peoples and Local Community Controlled Territories and Conserved Areas (ICCAs) in Southern and East Africa, to identify examples and best practices from the region. 

Following a comprehensive introduction to ICCAs and their recognition under relevant international law by Natural Justice, two expert panels introduced and discussed ten individual examples of ICCAs in the region. 

On the basis of experiences from Botswana, Ethiopia, Kenya, Namibia, South Africa and Tanzania, the 25 participants from the region discussed various strategies and best practices for communities to protect their ICCAs. The discussions revolved around management of ICCAs, documentation of ICCAs, and strategic litigation. 

Regarding management, the experiences from Namibia and Ethiopia, in particular, highlighted the importance of developing strong community management structures that integrate customary governance while also supporting livelihood generation. 

The discussion on documentation focused on resources and land documentation ‘on paper’, for instance through geo-referencing, as well as on documentation ‘in the landscape’ through the establishment of signposts and other visual aids. Especially the case studies on pastoralist communities, sacred sites and large land areas with weak enforcement structures underlined the importance of documentation as key to obtaining formal recognition of the areas, as well to protecting areas from other external interferences. 

Finally, the discussions on strategic litigation emphasized the importance of directly involving communities in litigation-related stakeholder negotiations and adjudicative processes. Empowering communities to hold meetings on their own ground, to speak on their own behalf, and to determine the overall strategy is key to ensuring positive outcomes and to increasing their confidence as actors in their own rights. 

The participants from the region concluded that portraying community conserved areas as ICCAs can be key to linking different resources and land rights issues with livelihood objectives and intra-community processes. 

Lesle Jansen and Gino Cocchiaro presented for Natural Justice. A large number of country and international legal reviews of ICCAs are available here. The ICCA registry can be accessed here.
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Posted in Documentation, ICCAs, Legal Empowerment, Legal Review | No comments

Thursday, 7 November 2013

Africa Regional Symposium for Community Land and Natural Resources Protection

Posted on 06:12 by Unknown
From 5-7 November, 30 pioneering community and civil society experts gathered in the !khwa ttu San community centre outside Cape Town, South Africa, for the first Africa Regional Symposium for Community Land and Natural Resources Protection. 

The Symposium, co-convened by Natural Justice and Namati, facilitated an exchange of best practices on community empowerment for strengthening land and natural resources rights among twelve African countries and more than two dozen communities. 

The event set out to meet three interrelated objectives: 

1. Share best practices, tools and strategies for empowered community land and natural resource management and protection; 

2. Support each other to confront local and/or national challenges to community land and natural resources claims; and 

3. Brainstorm new and innovative forms of legal empowerment and build a cross-disciplinary community of practice that fosters continued dialogue and learning. 
The workshop consisted of a number of small group works and plenary discussions that addressed a number of interrelated challenges at the community governance level (community definition, governance and leadership, equity and gender, conservation and stewardship, community driven development) and regarding communities’ external interactions (investor-community relations, and policies laws and governments). Discussions revolved around specific case studies, project experiences and broader advocacy strategies.

Community protocols (www.communityprotocols.org) and Natural Justice’s Living Convention were both discussed as useful legal empowerment strategies. 

To ensure that the successful tactics and approaches that were identified during the dialogue are made available to a vast number of practitioners around the world, in a next step, Natural Justice and Namati will facilitate a practitioner-written guide to community legal empowerment for strengthening landscape rights. 

The guide will: 

1. Outline a range of community land and natural resources protection methodologies; 

2. Present the variety of positive strategies brainstormed at the conference; 

3. Highlight some of the most compelling, successful case studies presented; and 

4. Illustrate the most intractable obstacles faced and some suggested solutions. 

The over-arching aim of both the symposium and the guide is to support and train CSOs around the world to effectively facilitate community land protection efforts and, in the process, work with communities to improve intra-community governance, gender equity, and sustainable natural resource management. Sharing practitioners’ strategies is central to this effort. 





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Posted in biocultural community protocols, Community Land Rights, Legal Empowerment, Living Convention | No comments

Monday, 8 April 2013

New IIED Publication on Legal Empowerment and Accountability in Africa's Land Rush

Posted on 04:15 by Unknown
The International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) has released a new publication entitled "Accountability in Africa's Land Rush: What role for legal empowerment". According to IIED website, "In recent years, there has been a renewed interest in acquiring farmland for agricultural investments in lower-income countries. Whilst such investments can create jobs, improve access to markets and support infrastructure, many large land deals have been associated with negative impacts for local populations, including the dispossession of land and other resources and increased conflict over economic benefits. There is growing evidence on the scale, geography and impacts of large deals. But less is known about how the legal frameworks regulating this land rush shape opportunities and constraints in formal pathways to accountability; and how people who feel wronged by land deals are responding to seek justice, and to what ends. 

This report assesses the state of evidence on pathways to accountability in the global land rush, with a focus on Africa. It also identifies areas for a new research agenda that places accountability at its centre." The publication is available in English here.
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Posted in Africa, IIED, Land Grabbing, Legal Empowerment | No comments

Monday, 11 March 2013

Workshop on Legal Tools and Agricultural Investments in Bangkok

Posted on 03:58 by Unknown
Palm oil development in peninsular
Malaysia. 
From 7-8 March, Harry Jonas (Natural Justice) attended a workshop on Legal Tools for Accountability in Agricultural Investments for South East Asia hosted by Focus on the Global South and the International Institute for the Environment and Development.

Participants engaged with a range of issues over the two days, including: investment protection and promotion in the ASEAN; national legal frameworks; human rights mechanisms; government investor and farmer-investor contracts; and international regulatory frameworks. The workshop was held in Bangkok, and was preceded by a public forum held at Chulalongkorn University entitled: Rethinking Policy and Legal Frameworks for Inclusive and Sustainable Investments in Agriculture in South East Asia.

Harry thanks colleagues at Focus and IIED for what was a useful and thought-provoking few days.
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Posted in agricultural investments, IIED, Legal Empowerment, Our Work, Southeast Asia | No comments

Monday, 11 February 2013

EMRIP Submission on Indigenous Peoples and Access to Justice

Posted on 09:30 by Unknown
Orang asli (Indigenous peoples) of Malaysia celebrate a
successful High Court judgment in 2012. Photo via The Star.
On 11 February, Natural Justice made two submissions to a Human Rights Council-mandated study by the Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (EMRIP) on access to justice in the protection and promotion of the rights of Indigenous peoples. The draft study will be presented at the sixth session of EMRIP in July.

The first submission had a global focus and consisted of two parts. Part I included inputs and experiences from several countries in Asia, Africa, and North and South America, with particular emphasis on the protection and stewardship of Indigenous peoples’ customary territories and resources. These were primarily drawn from a series of legal reviews coordinated in 2012 by Natural Justice and Kalpavriksh on behalf of the Indigenous Peoples’ and Community Conserved Territories and Areas (ICCA) Consortium.  It focused on the following themes before setting out key recommendations from the legal reviews:
  1. The relationship between access to justice and a range of other Indigenous peoples’ rights;
  2. Systemic and structural threats to Indigenous peoples’ rights and their territories and resources;
  3. Judicial systems themselves as a barrier to justice;
  4. Landmark judgments;
  5. Landmark legislation; and
  6. Continuing challenges with implementation and compliance.
Part II then suggested biocultural community protocols as an innovative tool for integrated legal empowerment to enable Indigenous peoples to access justice and to assert and affirm a range of other rights and responsibilities.

The second submission was a joint submission in French in collaboration with Programme d’Intégration et de Développement du Peuple Pygmée au Kivu (PIDP-Kivu) and focused on the particular challenges that the Indigenous peoples of North Kivu face in relation to access justice. These and other submissions by Natural Justice are available here.
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Posted in Access to Justice, biocultural community protocols, EMRIP, Indigenous Peoples' Rights, Legal Empowerment, Legal Submissions, Our Work | No comments

Thursday, 24 January 2013

Namati Hiring

Posted on 22:31 by Unknown
Natural Justice-partner Namati is hiring! Namati, which develops, implements and evaluates models for delivering quality legal aid at scale, has three positions open: Director of Finance and Administration; Director of Communications and Advocacy; and Director of Research and Evaluation. Completed applications should be emailed to employment@namati.org by January 31, 2013. 

Learn more about the positions, and Namati, here. Follow Namati on Twitter here, like them on Facebook here, and subscribe to their Youtube channel here.
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Posted in Community Land Rights, Employment, Land Tenure Security, Legal Aid, Legal Empowerment, Namati | No comments

Monday, 14 January 2013

Animated Film on REDD+

Posted on 04:08 by Unknown

The Global Canopy Programme has released an updated version of “An Introduction to REDD”, described as "a short animated film that aims to explain REDD+ to non-expert audiences in a clear and succinct way."

Find out more about the film here, including versions in French, Portuguese and Spanish.
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Posted in Design, Global Canopy Programme, Legal Empowerment, Online Eduction, REDD, Video | No comments

Sunday, 13 January 2013

UN Resolution on Legal Aid

Posted on 23:33 by Unknown
Via namati.org
The United Nations Commission for Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice has unanimously adopted a resolution for the groundbreaking UN Principles and Guidelines on Access to Legal Aid in Criminal Justice Systems. The principles and guidelines are the first international instrument on legal aid.

According to analysis by Namati, some of the most significant components of the resolution are:

  • Prompt access to legal aid at all stages of the criminal justice process and a right to be informed about a right to legal aid and other procedural safeguards before any questioning and deprivation of liberty; 
  • The involvement of a diversity of legal aid providers including lawyers, CSOs, university legal clinicians and paralegals; and 
  • The development of a nationwide legal aid system that is sufficiently staffed and resourced to ensure effective and quality legal aid services delivery. 

Read more of Namati’s analysis on the principles and guidelines here.
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Posted in CCPCJ, Human Rights, Legal Aid, Legal Empowerment, Namati, UN | No comments

Wednesday, 12 December 2012

Law, Environment and Design Workshop - Bangalore

Posted on 01:03 by Unknown
Natural Justice and the Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology co-hosted a workshop entitled “Engendering Dialogue among Law, Environment and Design” at Srishti's campus in Bangalore, India on 7 December, 2012. The workshop sought to share the visions of participants, discuss ways of working together, and explore possible intersections between law, environment and design. The workshop also saw the launch of the website of Natural Justice and Srishti’s exciting new joint project, the Law, Environment and Design (LED) Lab (opening January, 2013). Representatives from the Global Environments Summer Academy, the International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development and the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment also participated in the workshop. 

While the LED website is not yet fully populated, it can be accessed here.
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Posted in Design, LED, Legal Empowerment, Srishti | No comments

Sunday, 11 November 2012

Workshop on Legal Empowerment in Southeast Asia

Posted on 23:54 by Unknown
Rooftops in Jakarta.
From 6-7 November in Jakarta, Indonesia, Harry Jonas (Natural Justice) attended a two-day workshop on legal empowerment in Southeast Asia. Hosted by Namati, the Open Society Justice Initiative, the Indonesian Legal Resource Centre, and the TIFA Foundation, the workshop brought together over 30 lawyers and legal specialists focusing on legal empowerment in the region. Over the two days, the group heard presentations, engaged in participatory methodologies and developed a forward-looking strategy for the region. Participants also assessed how to ensure that justice issues are referenced in the post-2015 Millennium Development Goals process, which they considered to be a particularly strategic approach to creating systemic change. On behalf of the Natural Justice team, Harry thanks the organizers for the opportunity and looks forward to supporting next steps.
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Posted in Asia, Harry Jonas, Legal Empowerment, Our Work, Southeast Asia | No comments

Wednesday, 3 October 2012

ALF Presentation on Creative Media and the Law

Posted on 04:56 by Unknown
Namita Malhotra of the Alternative Law Forum (ALF) presented on her experiences using different forms of media to communicate the law at the Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology on 3 October, 2012. The presentation introduced faculty from Srishti and the Natural Justice India team to the use of different media forms and some of their potential challenges. ALF has used these different forms as tools to intervene on a variety of issues ranging from piracy to censorship. Their work continues to highlight the need for experimental modes of communicating the law, with an emphasis on exploring how the law can be deconstructed and understood through a multidisciplinary lens. This presentation will help to inform Natural Justice and Srishti’s work in setting up a lab to focused on exploring how design can be used to flesh out legal problems.
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Posted in ALF, Asia, Design, India, Legal Empowerment, Our Work, Srishti | No comments
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