Goshen College Environmental Science

Engaging academia with local and global issues of sustainability

We seek to make ourselves aware of our connections to global issues of peace, justice, and environmental stewardship while seeking local solutions in which we can actively be agents of change.

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Created: Jan 08, 2009

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Created: Jan 13, 2009
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Indigenous People's Global Summit on Climate Change

Event Info   Edit

Start time: Mon, Apr 20, 2009 07:00
 
End time: Fri, Apr 24, 2009 16:00
 
Type: Conference
 
Website: www.indigenoussummit.com
 
Contact email: info [at] indigenoussummit.com
 
Address: Anchorage, Alaska
United States
 

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LIVE WEBCAST AVAILABLE if you can't make it to Anchorage

Program for the conference

 


The Inuit Circumpolar Council is hosting April 20-24, 2009 in Anchorage, Alaska a Global Summit on Climate Change that will bring together indigenous delegates and observers.

The purpose of the summit is to enable Indigenous peoples from all regions of the globe to exchange their knowledge and experience in adapting to the impacts of climate change, and to develop key messages and recommendations to be articulated to the world at the Conference of Parties (COP) to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change in Copenhagen, Denmark in December 2009.

Indigenous Peoples from all regions of the world depend upon the natural environment. Their rich and detailed traditional knowledge reflects and embodies a cultural and spiritual relationship with the land, ocean and wildlife.

However, human activity is changing the world’s climate and altering the natural environment to which Indigenous Peoples are so closely attached and on which they so heavily rely.

In a very real sense, therefore, Indigenous Peoples are on the front lines of climate change. They observe climate and environmental changes first-hand and use traditional knowledge and survival skills to adapt to these changes as they occur.

Moreover, they must do so at a time when their cultures and livelihoods are already undergoing significant changes due, in part, to the accelerated development of natural resources from their traditional territories stimulated by trade liberalization and globalization.

Reflecting their position as “stewards” of the environment and drawing upon their age-old traditional knowledge—the heart of their cultural resilience—Indigenous Peoples were among the first groups to call upon national governments, transnational corporations and civil society to do more to protect the Earth and human society from climate change.

The Indigenous Peoples’ Global Summit
will bring together 200-300 indigenous participants and observers from around the world to pursue four key objectives:

1. Consolidate, share and draw lessons from the views and experiences of Indigenous Peoples around the world on the impacts and effects of climate change on their ways of life and their natural environment, including responses;

2. Raise the visibility, participation and role of Indigenous Peoples in local, national, regional and international processes in formulating strategies and partnerships that engage local communities and other stakeholders to respond to the impacts of climate change;

3. Analyze, discuss and promote public awareness of the impacts and consequences of programs and proposals for climate change mitigation and adaptation, and assess proposed solutions to climate change from the perspective of Indigenous Peoples; and

4. Advocate effective strategies and solutions in response to climate change from the perspective of the cultures, world views, and traditional knowledge of Indigenous Peoples, including local, national, regional and international rights-based approaches.

 

Background

Read the Concept Paper developed for the Indigenous Peoples’ Global Summit.

 

Steering Committee members:
Patricia Cochran (Chair, Inuit Circumpolar Council, Anchorage, Alaska)
Victoria Tauli-Corpuz (Chair, UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, the Philippines)
Tarcila Rivera Zea (Executive Director, Chirapaq-Centro de Culturas Indigenas del Peru)
Andrea Carmen (Executive Director, International Indian Treaty Council)
Joseph Ole Simel (National Coordinator, Mainyoito Pastoralist Integrated Development Organization, Masai, Kenya)
Cletus Springer (Director, Dept. of Sustainable Development, Organization of American States)
Ben Namakin (Program Manager Environmental Education & Awareness Program Conservation Society of Pohnpei (CSP)

 

>> Read The Anchorage Declaration (April 24, 2009)

 


Comments (1 - 3 of 3)

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Thanks for posting this. Does anyone know whether we will be able to access the longer report that was also written as part of the Summit?
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Who are we?
We are a group who are passionate about rapid, global, positive change

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kibii 10 months ago
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Often the first to experience and appreciate the immediate and long-term implications of climate change, indigenous communities have historically adjusted their traditional ways of life in response to changes in climate. Presently, the pace of change has quickened so dramatically that it presents a growing threat to the health, well-being, and very existence of humankind. It presents particular challenges to indigenous communities, for it undermines their intricate relationship with the Land. As the nation states contemplate their options in the face of exponentially accelerating climate change, the voices and concerns of indigenous peoples remain largely ignored, despite great global strides towards recognizing indigenous peoples rights (UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, 2007). The Bali Roadmap launched in December 2007 at the UNFCCC COP 11th, is leading to the 2009 UNFCCC COP 13th in Copenhagen where the post-2012 climate change adaptation and mitigations landscape will be defined. The Indigenous Summit in Achorage is aimed at bringing indigenous people’s concerns to the center stage of global climate debate. It is poised to become a trail-blazing and stage-setting initiative of world’s indigenous community on the issue of climate change mitigation and adaptation. The Summit will create secure unbiased space for communication and action; linking the outcomes of indigenous peoples’ deliberations into relevant policy processes; and supporting the emergence of transnational communities of inquiry and action. The initiative will serve as a launch pad for serious proposals to either amend the Convention or to develop an adaptation protocol that reflects the rights and interests of Indigenous peoples worldwide.

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