集体权属的正规化是否支持土著居民的可持续生计?来自秘鲁亚马逊地区土著社区的见解

IF 1.8 3区 经济学 Q3 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES International Journal of the Commons Pub Date : 2021-01-01 DOI:10.5334/ijc.1126
J. P. Sarmiento Barletti, Blanca Begert, Miguel Angel Guerra Loza
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引用次数: 7

摘要

经过土著人民及其盟友几十年的积极行动,将土著土地权利正式化的必要性作为应对气候变化的一项战略受到了越来越多的全球关注。研究强调了社区森林管理制度与碳封存之间的兼容性,重申了确保土著土地权属在以森林为基础的气候变化缓解战略中必须发挥的重要作用。本文基于对秘鲁亚马逊地区6个拥有正式集体头衔的土著社区进行的研究,认为仅仅拥有头衔不足以确保土著人民得到支持,使他们能够获得公认的权利,并在应对气候危机中发挥核心作用。土著居民Awajún和Asháninka的举报人讨论了在获得合适的生计、过度限制木材采伐、与小农移民农民的土地冲突和采掘特许权、不明确的冲突解决机制以及采用与实际土著领导角色和机构不同的社区治理模式的政策等方面面临的挑战。所有这些挑战都给社区成员带来了压力,促使他们使用不可持续的土地和资源,并削弱了他们保护森林的能力。尽管秘鲁已将土著社区和其他共同管理地区纳入其对《巴黎协定》的国家自主贡献的缓解行动,但它必须重新审查其产权改革,以及对社区的土地和资源获取进行监管和削弱的方式。这将使产权制度在实践中实现其在理论上作为促进公平和减缓气候变化战略的承诺。通讯作者:Juan Pablo Sarmiento Barletti秘鲁国际林业研究中心j.sarmiento@cgiar.org
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Is the Formalization of Collective Tenure Rights Supporting Sustainable Indigenous Livelihoods? Insights from Comunidades Nativas in the Peruvian Amazon
After decades of activism by Indigenous Peoples and their allies, the need to formalize Indigenous land rights has received increasing global attention as a strategy to address climate change. Research has highlighted the compatibility between community forest management regimes and carbon sequestration, reiterating the essential role that securing Indigenous land tenure must play in forest-based climate change mitigation strategies. Based on research conducted in six Indigenous Comunidades Nativas with formal collective titles in Peruvian Amazonia, this article argues that titling alone is not enough to ensure that Indigenous Peoples are supported and enabled to access their recognized rights and play a central role in addressing the climate crisis. Indigenous Awajún and Asháninka informants discussed challenges with accessing suitable livelihoods, excessive restrictions on timber harvest, land conflicts with smallholder migrant farmers and extractive concessions, unclear conflict resolution mechanisms, and policies that assume a communal governance model that differs from actual Indigenous leadership roles and institutions. All of these challenges put pressure on community members, creating incentives for unsustainable land and resource use, and undermining their abilities to protect their forests. Although Peru has included Comunidades Nativas and other co-managed areas in the mitigation actions toward its Nationally Determined Contribution to the Paris Agreement, it must re-examine its titling reforms, and the way that Comunidades’ land and resource access is regulated and weakened. This will allow for titling in practice to live up to its promise in theory as a strategy for promoting equity and mitigating climate change. CORRESPONDING AUTHOR: Juan Pablo Sarmiento Barletti Center for International Forestry Research, Peru j.sarmiento@cgiar.org
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来源期刊
International Journal of the Commons
International Journal of the Commons ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES-
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
10.50%
发文量
17
审稿时长
30 weeks
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