Authors
Stephen T Garnett, Neil D Burgess, Julia E Fa, Álvaro Fernández-Llamazares, Zsolt Molnár, Cathy J Robinson, James EM Watson, Kerstin K Zander, Beau Austin, Eduardo S Brondizio, Neil French Collier, Tom Duncan, Erle Ellis, Hayley Geyle, Micha V Jackson, Harry Jonas, Pernilla Malmer, Ben McGowan, Amphone Sivongxay, Ian Leiper
Publication date
2018/7
Journal
Nature Sustainability
Volume
1
Issue
7
Pages
369-374
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Understanding the scale, location and nature conservation values of the lands over which Indigenous Peoples exercise traditional rights is central to implementation of several global conservation and climate agreements. However, spatial information on Indigenous lands has never been aggregated globally. Here, using publicly available geospatial resources, we show that Indigenous Peoples manage or have tenure rights over at least ~38 million km2 in 87 countries or politically distinct areas on all inhabited continents. This represents over a quarter of the world’s land surface, and intersects about 40% of all terrestrial protected areas and ecologically intact landscapes (for example, boreal and tropical primary forests, savannas and marshes). Our results add to growing evidence that recognizing Indigenous Peoples’ rights to land, benefit sharing and institutions is essential to meeting local and global conservation …
Total citations
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