CSQ 46-1 Indigenous Climate Change Solutions: Ensuring the Future of Our Planet

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E x ec u tive D irect o r ’ S message

Indigenous Knowledge is the Key to Combating Climate Change

Donors like you make our work around the world possible. Thanks so much for being part of Cultural Survival!

Dear Cultural Survival Community,

Cultural Survival Staff

his past Fall, the 26th Conference of Parties of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP26) took place in Glasgow, Scotland. Five of my Cultural Survival colleagues and I attended the conference and participated in various dialogues and presentations pertaining to the proposed solutions to address climate change mitigation and adaptation, loss, and damages of our ecosystems as well as climate finance. Alongside many other Indigenous leaders present at COP26 and others who took to the streets to protest the climate conference, Cultural Survival’s Indigenous women-led delegation denounced the so-called “nature-based” and scalable solutions as false solutions that continue to displace and criminalize Indigenous Peoples on their own lands and territories while commodifying, extracting, and exploiting our environments. Our delegation centered and uplifted Indigenous Peoples’ rights, solutions, and Traditional Knowledge in tackling climate change, advocating for direct funding to support Indigenous Peoples’ land titling, tenure, stewardship, and self-determination, and amplifying the voices of Indigenous Peoples. Cultural Survival is dedicating this issue of the Cultural Survival Quarterly to uplifting the voices and work of Indigenous community leaders working to mitigate and combat climate change at local, national, and international levels. They are the ones taking action and creating change with little to no government support. We report on some of the small wins at COP26, such as the adoption of the second three-year work plan of the Local Communities and Indigenous Peoples Platform and securing one seat to represent Indigenous Peoples in the Climate Technology Centre and Network Advisory Body. We also highlight new fronts of the struggle for Indigenous rights in the Just Transition with the need to monitor human rights commitments of companies working in the green economy to source transition minerals. The rapid increase of mining for these minerals impacts Indigenous communities through displacement

Mark Camp, Deputy Executive Director

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Galina Angarova (Buryat), Executive Director Avexnim Cojtí (Maya K’iche’), Director of Programs Daisee Francour (Oneida), Director of Strategic Partnerships and Communications Monica Coc Magnusson (Q’eqchi Maya), Director of Advocacy and Policy

Verónica Aguilar (Mixtec), Program Assistant, Keepers of the Earth Fund

Bryan Bixcul (Maya Tz’utujil), Executive Assistant

Jessie Cherofsky, Advocacy Program Researcher Danielle DeLuca, Advocacy & Development Manager Shaldon Ferris (Khoisan), Indigenous Radio Program Coordinator Sofia Flynn, Accounting & Office Manager

and dispossession. Due to the lack of government action, Indigenous leaders are directly engaging companies in the supply chain to ensure they are aware of the risks posed to Indigenous Peoples. We also report on how centering Indigenous knowledge enables the regeneration of local ecosystems and biodiversity. This crucial, on-the-ground work by Indigenous communities needs to be resourced and funded directly to ensure we have a healthy and sustainable planet for future generations. We hope you will join us in supporting Indigenous climate solutions. Our 50-year legacy of advocating for Indigenous Peoples’ rights is thanks to you, our community, who help make our work possible. Join us in shifting the narrative and resources to support Indigenous languages, solutions, and leadership to build a better world for us all. For our 50th anniversary, we have an ambitious goal to raise $500,000 by June 1, 2022 for our #CS50 campaign. Support Indigenous rights and donate at cs.org/donate!

Nati Garcia (Maya Mam), Acting Community Media Grants Manager Adriana Hernández (Maya K'iche'), Emerging Strategies Coordinator

Dev Kumar Sunuwar (Kumar/Sunuwar), Community Media Program Coordinator Danae Laura, Bazaar Program Manager

Maria del Rosario “Rosy” Sul González (Kaqchikel), Indigenous Rights Radio Program Manager

Bia’ni Madsa’ Juárez López, (Mixe/Ayuuk ja’ay & Zapotec/Binnizá), Keepers of the Earth Fund Program Manager Jamie Malcolm-Brown, Communications & Information Technology Manager

Amparo Monzón (Maya K’iche), Program Assistant, Community Media & Indigenous Rights Radio Programs Cat Monzón (Maya K’iche’), Indigenous Community Media Youth Fellowship Coordinator

Cesar Gomez Moscut (Pocomam), Community Media Program Coordinator

Edson Krenak Naknanuk (Krenak), Lead on Brazil Diana Pastor (Maya K’iche’), Media Coordinator Guadalupe Pastrana (Nahua), Indigenous Rights Radio Producer

Agnes Portalewska, Communications Manager Sócrates Vásquez (Ayuujk), Program Manager, Community Media Miranda Vitello, Development Coordinator

Candy Williams, Human Resources Manager

Galina Angarova (Buryat) Executive Director

INTERNS AND VOLUNTEERS Dorothea Bauer, Sarah Hume, Rebecca Kirkpatrick, Mariana Navarrete, Lauren Nolan, Kathryn Sullivan

Stay connected www.cs.org Cultural Survival Quarterly March 2022

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