Indigenous Shareholdership in Environmental Markets
環境市場における先住民の株主権 (AI 翻訳)
WariNkwi Flores, Lauren Serota, Anna Lerner
🤖 gxceed AI 要約
日本語
本論文は、先住民が気候変動対策や生態系保全において重要な役割を果たしているにもかかわらず、国際的な気候変動対話や資金配分から除外されている問題を指摘する。先住民は世界の陸地の40%を管理し、熱帯林の地上炭素の24%を保全しているが、気候資金の1%未満しか受取っていない。著者らは、環境市場における先住民の株主権モデルを提案し、彼らの知識と権利を組み込む必要性を強調する。
English
This paper highlights the exclusion of Indigenous Peoples from international climate dialogues and finance, despite their critical role in managing ecosystems and storing carbon. Indigenous groups manage 40% of global land and hold 24% of tropical forest carbon, yet receive less than 1% of climate finance. The authors propose an Indigenous shareholdership model in environmental markets to integrate their knowledge and rights.
Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.
📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters
日本のGX文脈において
日本ではアイヌ民族の権利が近年注目されているが、気候変動対策における先住民の包摂はまだ議論が不十分である。本論文は、日本のGX政策においても先住民の知識や土地管理の価値を認識し、資金配分の公平性を検討する契機となる。
In the global GX context
Globally, this paper addresses a critical gap in climate finance allocation and carbon market governance. As carbon markets expand under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement and voluntary markets, integrating Indigenous shareholdership aligns with just transition and social safeguards, relevant to ISSB and CSRD disclosure requirements on human rights and indigenous communities.
👥 読者別の含意
🔬研究者:Provides a framework to analyze equity in climate finance and carbon markets; highlights empirical data on Indigenous land management contributions.
🏢実務担当者:Carbon project developers and climate finance institutions can use the shareholdership model to design inclusive benefit-sharing mechanisms.
🏛政策担当者:Policy implications for climate funds and carbon crediting programs to allocate resources and rights equitably to Indigenous Peoples.
📄 Abstract(原文)
Indigenous Peoples play a critical role in the management of natural ecosystems across the globe. For example, to prevent the harshest effects of climate change and ecosystem collapse, we must protect the remaining tropical rainforests that cover 6% of Earth’s surface (World Economic Forum). Indigenous models of forest management in the Brazilian Amazon have proven effective in limiting deforestation, curbing forest fires, and sequestering carbon emissions. Scientists estimate that protecting Indigenous land rights in the Brazilian Amazon could reduce deforestation rates by 66% (Nature). However, Indigenous Peoples and their land management practices are noticeably absent from international dialogues, initiatives, and decisions to address climate change and ecosystem services, function, and loss. Outside of niche initiatives, Indigenous Knowledge Systems, their methods of valuing nature, and decision rights are often underrepresented - reduced to token participation in working groups, and sometimes even blatantly ignored or violated (Fisk et al. 2021; Jacobs et al. 2022; Hernández et al 2022). We see this in the allocation of climate and nature finance. Indigenous Peoples globally manage at least 38 million square kilometers of land, accounting for about 40% of the world’s land surface without accounting for aquatic biosphere stewardship (Garnett et al. 2018). These lands and aquatic territories are home to vast amounts of biodiversity (Fa et al. 2020; Sobrevila 2008). 24% of the carbon stored above ground in the world’s tropical forests is in the collectively and sustainably managed lands of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities. Despite this, less than 1% of global climate finance is directed to these groups to manage tropical forests (Climate Champions; HRFN 2024).
🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース
- openalex https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19802690first seen 2026-05-17 04:33:06 · last seen 2026-05-27 04:29:49
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