Join our dialogue on how to set up more and better financial mechanisms that can support agroecological initiatives of local communities living in drylands.
The land degradation neutrality (LDN) response hierarchy of Avoid > Reduce > Reverse land degradation is an overarching principle for LDN implementation, which guides people in planning interventions to achieve LDN. The hierarchy articulates which interventions should be prioritised based on their potential to maximise the conservation of land-based natural capital, recognising that avoiding or reducing land degradation is generally more cost-effective than efforts to reverse past degradation. As value for money is highest in the Avoiding and in Reducing Land Degradation response, a smart way to spend money is to support sustainable land management approaches like agroecology that work with nature, not against it.
Join our event, providing space for an interactive discussion among COP15 participants on multi-actor collaboration and the financing of community-based restoration
This letter by Both ENDS to the African Development Bank is a comment written in reaction to a draft version published by the Bank of its Environmental and Social Policy as part of a formal public consultation held by the Bank. This comment was sent to the bank along a joint submission letter with other CSOs, and specifically responds to the overarching Policy.
The bank's flexible requirements for clients and national standards for risky projects dilute safeguards. Project approval should be predicated on specific and binding targets for compliance and reflect input from communities involved.
Together with 29 other CSO's, we've submitted our comments and recommendations in the Public Consultation on the AfDB Integrated Safeguards System. These include that the Bank should prioritize community-led development and human rights-based approaches; protect natural resources and tackles environmental and climate crises; raise the bar on access to information, transparency and accountability; facilitate participatory processes in policies, programmes and projects; and end inequality, poverty, and the cutback and privatization of vital services.
Van 9 tot 20 mei vindt in Abidjan, de hoofdstad van Ivoorkust, de 15e 'Conferentie van de UN Convention to Combat Desertification, Land Degradation and Drought (UNCCD COP15) plaats. Overheden, Beleidsmakers, maatschappelijke organisaties en wetenschappers uit landen van over de hele wereld gaan met elkaar in gesprek over de problematiek rond droogte, landdegradatie en verwoestijning die steeds groter worden. Collega's Nathalie van Haren en Stefan Schüller zijn erbij, net als een flink aantal medewerkers van organisaties waarmee Both ENDS soms al decennialang mee samenwerkt. Maar wat is het doel van de bijeenkomst, wat wordt er besproken en waarom is het belangrijk om erbij te zijn? We vroegen het Nathalie en Stefan.
Both ENDS and the Land Portal Foundation invite you to the first webinar in the Whose Land? - Inclusive Pathways to Land Governance series, which aims to provide a platform for stakeholders engaged in land governance to exchange on the importance of inclusivity and meaningful participation of all relevant actors in both formal and informal land governance processes.
Het klinkt zo logisch: patenten en andere intellectuele eigendomsrechten beschermen investeringen in innovaties, waardoor er meer innovaties gedaan worden waarvan de hele wereld vervolgens kan profiteren. Zoals nieuwe medicijnen of droogte-resistente gewassen. Maar in de praktijk werken deze eigendomsrechten vaak averechts en belemmeren ze de toegang tot innovaties juist voor degenen die ze het hardst nodig hebben.