| |
Native Lands works to protect biological
and cultural diversity throughout the world, with a strong
focus on Latin America. We do this by assisting indigenous
peoples to carry out their agendas for the preservation of
their natural and cultural heritage. Through a combined program
of applied research, training, and mapping, Native Lands seeks
to:
· strengthen the capacity of indigenous
peoples to organize themselves to protect their lands, sustainably
manage and conserve their natural resources, and strengthen
their cultures;
· encourage communication and the
formation of collaborative relationships among indigenous
peoples, governments, and conservation and development organizations
for the co-management of natural areas and the preservation
of indigenous cultures;
· link indigenous peoples with the
technical, legal, and finandcial resources they need to
carry out these programs; and
· assist in the creation of policies
that foster self-determination among indigenous peoples.
Native Lands was founded in the late
1980s as the Central America Program of Cultural Survival,
an indigenous rights organization based in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Initially, our program consisted of a small grants fund to
support the activities of local groups, with emphasis on territorial
defense and the management of natural resources. We spent
considerable time in the field during this period, visiting
communities and talking with people about their problems and
aspirations. This was a valuable learning experience that
served as a sound foundation upon which our program developed
over the next decade. In the early 1990s, we became an independent
non-profit organization, the Center for the Support of Native
Lands.
In 1992, Native Lands undertook two
cartography projects that marked an important step forward
in our work with indigenous peoples. The first was a collaborative
venture with the National Geographic Society on a bilingual
Spanish-English map titled The Coexistence of Indigenous Peoples
and the Natural Environment in Central America. Published
as an insert in the journal Research & Exploration, it was
widely distributed and had a powerful impact in both the indigenous
and environmental sectors in the region.
This map was followed 10 years later
with a second map, Indigenous Peoples and Natural Ecosystems
in Central America and Southern Mexico, again done in collaboration
with National Geographic. Also bilingual Spanish-English,
it encompassed the entire Maya region, including southern
Mexico, and included both terrestrial and marine ecosystems.
It was distributed as an insert in the February 2003 issue
of National Geographic en Español throughout Central America
and Mexico.
The second cartography project was
a participatory mapping effort with five ethnic groups in
the Honduran Mosquitia, the most remote - and heavily forested
- region of that country. Carried out with two local organizations
- MOPAWI and MASTA - the project documented the land use areas
of more than 170 communities and served to halt foreign timber
concessions and colonization programs and lay the groundwork
for indigenous claims for land rights. This was the first
of a series of similar projects with indigenous groups in
Latin America - Panama, Bolivia, Brazil, Suriname, Guatemala,
and Nicaragua - and later in the West African Republic of
Cameroon, Indonesia (West Papua), and Papua New Guinea. The
objectives of these projects have been to claim and defend
traditional territories, strengthen political organization,
to document cultural histories, and to better manage natural
resources.
A narrative account of our earliest
mapping projects in Honduras, Panama, and Bolivia can be found
in Indigenous Landscapes: A Study in Ethnocartography by Mac
Chapin & Bill Threlkeld (2001). This book also contains a
description of the methodology that Native Lands has been
developing for mapping indigenous lands. We also became involved
in the collaborative organization of conferences, workshops,
and technical exchanges during the 1990s. In 1996 we joined
with two Honduran organizations -MOPAWI & MASTA - to organize
The First Indigenous Conference on Land, Environment, and
Culture in Central America, and this was followed by a series
of regional workshops on indigenous territories, sustainable
development, protected areas, and cultural identity. In 1999
we collaborated with two Salvadorean organizations - CCNIS
& the Jefatura de Asuntos Indígenas of the Ministry of Education
- to hold The Second indigenous Conference on Land, Environment,
and Culture in Central America and Southern Mexico.
Our current program features our community
mapping work, with on-going projects in Papua New Guinea (with
the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle, Washington, and the PNG
University of Technology) and West Papua (with the Department
for International Development - DFID). We are also in the
process of writing a guidebook for the mapping work and expect
to have this finished by the end of 2006.
Native Lands' major task this year
is an in-depth study of the relations between donor agencies
and indigenous organizations, with a focus on Latin America.
It is a collaborative effort with First Peoples Worldwide
(FPW) and Oxfam America. It aims to understand the dynamics
of this complex - and difficult - relationship and emerge
with recommendations on how it may be improved.
|
|