Philippines (16 August 2023):
Supreme Court Issues Writ of Kalikasan Against DENR and Mining Operators in Mt. Mantalingahan, Palawan
Paula R. Prist et al (2023).
Protecting Brazilian Amazon Indigenous territories reduces atmospheric particulates and avoids associated health impacts and costs, Communications Earth & Environment volume 4, Article number: 34 (2023). Indigenous lands in Brazil’s Amazon have the potential to absorb over 7,000 tons of noxious fumes from forest fires every year. This would prevent about 15 million cases of respiratory and cardiovascular diseases annually, which would otherwise cost $2 billion to Brazil’s public health system.
Rayna Benzeev et al (2023).
Formalizing tenure of Indigenous lands improved forest outcomes in the Atlantic Forest of Brazil, PNAS Nexus, Volume 2, Issue 1, January 2023, pgac287. Deforestation rates were lower and reforestation rates higher in Indigenous territories where land tenure had been formalized, based on the changes in forest cover in 129 Indigenous territories in Brazil’s Atlantic Forest between 1995 and 2016.
PROTECTED AREAS & INDIGENOUS TERRITORIES EFFECTIVE AGAINST DEFORESTATION ACROSS AMAZON, 15 March 2023. Protected areas and Indigenous territories in the Amazon Rainforest experienced just one-third of the loss of primary forest compared to non-protected areas. Between 2017 and 2021, protected areas lost slightly less forest than Indigenous territories, but deforestation was lower in Indigenous territories.
Wendy Francesconi et al (2023).
Carbon footprints of forest degradation and deforestation by "basic-needs populations": a review, Carbon Footprints. Subsistence communities can drive forest loss to meet their basic needs when external pressures, poverty, and demand for natural resources increase, unveiling triggers that turn livelihoods from sustainable into deforestation drivers.
Tanya O’Garra at al (2023).
National-level evaluation of a community-based marine management initiative, Nature Sustainability volume 6, pages908–918 (2023). Locally managed marine areas in Fiji strengthened the mechanisms believed to advance conservation efforts but ultimately led to few social, economic, or even ecological benefits.
Marine Protected Areas Improve Health, Wealth of Nearby Communities, New Smithsonian-Led Study Shows Protecting Marine Life Can Support Multiple U.N. Sustainable Development Goals in Mesoamerican Reef, 22 June 2023 . In the Mesoamerican Reef in the Caribbean, well-enforced marine protected areas are not only beneficial for conservation but can also lift up the socioeconomic status of the local and Indigenous communities that live near them.
Harry W. Fischer et al (2023).
Community forest governance and synergies among carbon, biodiversity and livelihoods, Nature Climate Change volume 13, pages1340–1347 (2023). Forests in 15 tropical countries across Africa, Asia, and Latin America managed by Indigenous peoples and local communities are associated with improved outcomes for carbon storage, biodiversity, and forest livelihoods.