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COP15 event explored the role of relationships, partnerships, and networks in supporting Indigenous Peoples and local communities

This joint event, co-organised by the ICCA Consortium, Maliasili, Luc Hoffmann Institute, and IUCN CEESP, reflected on the core values that should guide relationships and partnerships and the power imbalances that often pervade them. Overall, the event highlighted the importance of reconceptualising partnerships from the perspective of Indigenous Peoples and local communities themselves and in the form of networks of solidarity and support

First published on 02/07/2023, and last updated on 04/18/2023

By Jessica Campese (ICCA Consortium Honorary member) and Holly Jonas (ICCA Consortium Global Coordinator)


Despite facing structural and systemic injustices, Indigenous Peoples and local communities play an outsized role in sustaining a healthy planet for all through their cultures, governance systems, and ways of life. Over the past several years, there has been growing recognition of and support for their rights, roles, and contributions, including in the knowledge base, laws and policies, financial mechanisms, and general public. Both this shift towards and remaining barriers and challenges to this recognition and support were apparent in the negotiations and outcomes of the recent 15th meeting of the Conference of the Parties (COP15) to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), which culminated in the Parties’ adoption of the new global biodiversity framework.

As more people and organisations seek to offer support to Indigenous Peoples and local communities, it is vitally important to reflect on the very nature of relationships and partnerships, including the core values that should guide them and the power imbalances that often pervade them. When thinking about partnerships in conservation, perhaps the first entities that come to mind are NGOs, funders, and governments. There is a growing push to reimagine and redefine partnerships and organisations in ways that are respectful and genuinely supportive of Indigenous Peoples’ and local communities’ self-determined priorities for their collective lands, waters, and territories of life.

In addition to these ‘traditional partnerships’ in the name of conservation, Indigenous Peoples and local communities often have extensive and diverse networks that they activate in diverse ways – for example, when defending their territories against destructive industries, when seeking support for an Indigenous education programme, or when sharing experiences and skills among peers. Reconceptualising partnerships from the perspective of Indigenous Peoples and local communities themselves and in the form of networks of solidarity and support can help illuminate more appropriate ways forward for those offering support.

To explore these important questions, continue reflecting on existing partnerships, and reconfigure the nature of partnerships moving forward, the ICCA Consortium, Maliasili, Luc Hoffmann Institute, and IUCN Commission on Environmental, Economic and Social Policy (CEESP) co-hosted a side event during CBD COP15. Held on 7 December 2022 from 18:15-19:45 ET, “All Our Relations: Exploring the role of relationships, partnerships, and networks in supporting Indigenous Peoples’ and local communities’ self-determined priorities” featured three ‘lightning roundtables’ with moderators and speakers from diverse backgrounds.

After opening remarks by co-moderators Inés Hernández (Luc Hoffmann Institute) and Holly Jonas (ICCA Consortium), participants connected with each other by reflecting on and sharing a stand-out personal experience with partnerships – positive, negative or otherwise – from the perspective of their community, organisation, or another context, focusing on what they learned and identifying key attributes or elements of healthy and supportive partnerships.

In the first roundtable on “understanding the heart of relationships”, we heard from Indigenous leaders from Burma/Myanmar, Kenya, and Colombia about the core values that guide relationships within their communities and territories, and the key elements of partnerships that have been particularly meaningful to them. In the second roundtable on “redefining ‘traditional’ partnerships”, we heard from champions for change within an international conservation NGO, a funder, and a multilateral agency about what needs to happen within their sectors to usher in a new generation of respectful and equitable partnerships with communities. In the third roundtable, we heard from two people who are innovating on long-standing domains of expertise and forms of social change and supporting communities to weave diverse networks of solidarity and support.

Explore the sections below  to learn more about what was discussed during the event.

Lightning Roundtable 1: Understanding the heart of relationships

Lightning Roundtable 2: Redefining ‘traditional’ partners

Lightning Roundtable 3: Weaving networks of solidarity and support

Closing remarks

Note: “The speakers’ remarks are not direct quotes but were paraphrased and/or edited for clarity. The ICCA Consortium would like to thank Rafaela Freundt and Sandra Da Silva for providing simultaneous interpretation support between English and Spanish during the side event. This side event was one of a series of COP15 events on systems change in financing and partnerships in support of Indigenous Peoples and local communities. For more information, please contact Holly Jonas (holly.j@iccaconsortium.org).