Global Land Governance and Tenure: A Call to Action
Date: May 6, 2025
Time: 9:00 AM-10:30 AM EST
Location: MC PRESTON AUDITORIUM
Date: May 6, 2025
Time: 9:00 AM-10:30 AM EST
Location: MC PRESTON AUDITORIUM
Organised every three years by the International Land Coalition, the 10th edition will be co-hosted by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, the European Union in Colombia and the Centre for Research and Popular Education (CINEP), alongside a National Organising Committee of sixty Colombia-based organisations.
This session brings together a range of actors to discuss ways to improve land use and set in motion a renewed agenda on the critical role that land tenure security and land access play in climate action.
The World Bank Land Conference has catalyzed the global land community for over 20 years, and we are pleased to announce that we will relaunch this premier event May 13-17, 2024, in Washington, DC under the annual theme of “Securing Land Tenure and Access for Climate Action.” |
La sexta reunión mundial del Foro de los Pueblos Indígenas en el FIDA, a celebrarse los días 9, 10 y 13 de febrero de 2023, se centrará en el Liderazgo de los pueblos indígenas en las cuestiones del clima: soluciones basadas en las comunidades para mejorar la resiliencia y la biodiversidad.
Strengthening security of tenure is considered a key outcome of the LAND-at-scale program as a pre-condition to improved livelihoods, resilience, and sustainable resource use. LAND-at-scale interventions employ a range of tools to achieve tenure security, in particular land mapping and registration. Despite the popularity of such interventions, the assumptions underpinning the impact pathways from registration to tenure security and derived outcomes such as improved livelihoods are not always built on a solid evidence base.
Panel will be presented in English with simultaneous interpretation in Arabic, French, and Russian.
Recent global events have had dyre impacts on the world's remaining forests, particularly in tropical regions.
Tuesday, November 23rd, 2021
8:30 AM – 10:00 AM (Eastern Time)
Online via Zoom
This session will be interpreted in French and Spanish.
Securing land rights is critical for realizing sustainable food systems that provide food security and overcome poverty. Security of property rights is central to preserving livelihoods, maintaining social stability, and increasing incentives for investment and for sustainable, productive land use.
Indigenous Peoples globally have high exposure to environmental change and are often considered an ‘‘at-risk’’ population, although there is growing evidence of their resilience. Ample research illustrates that Indigenous Peoples are actively observing and adapting to change in a diversity of ways. In this webinar we examined the common factor affecting resilience to environmental change among Indigenous Peoples and local communities.