• Home
  • Oil Palm
  • Climate Change
  • Contact
  • Links

LifeMosaic

Community Conversations

Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Home

September 1, 2008 by LifeMosaic

Indigenous peoples are the stewards of much of the world’s biological, cultural and linguistic diversity. Yet large-scale developments such as logging, dams, mines, fossil fuel extraction, and plantations often deny indigenous communities their lands, livelihoods and basic rights and destroy the ecosystems on which they depend. In many places indigenous peoples are marginalised and there is little accountability for governments and corporate interests that perpetrate abuses against them. They have little or no power or political voice and information about the impacts of these developments is often unavailable.

LifeMosaic’s mission is to support indigenous peoples in exercising their right to free, prior and informed consent before large scale land-use changes occur on their territories.

We do this by producing and co-ordinating the dissemination of information resources based on testimonies from communities where similar land-use changes have already happened. Projects are demand-driven and developed in partnership with communities, and movements for positive social and environmental change.

Resources cover development impacts, community organisation and positive alternatives. Grass-roots dissemination approaches ensure that resources reach thousands of communities and inform critical conversations and land-use decisions. LifeMosaic also develops and disseminates resources for use in international advocacy bringing voices from the grassroots to decision-makers.

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments Yet

  • Pages

    • Climate Change
    • Contact
    • Links
    • Oil Palm
    • Small Projects
  • Wangari Maathai

    “Only informed and empowered citizens can hold their leaders accountable. Leaders who know that their citizens cannot hold them accountable tend to be irresponsible, abuse power and abuse their citizens. They mismanage resources and in the process cause much poverty and suffering. In fighting poverty it is essential to empower communities.”
  • Community Worker, Indonesia

    “Currently in communities, there is a lack of balanced information. There is more information from companies and the government than information on how plantations affect people in reality. We need information based on people’s real experience.”
  • Rubber Farmer, Indonesia

    “We now have information about our friends who live closer to roads and whose land has been converted into oil palm plantations. We saw them having problems. They do not earn enough, they cannot get a job and they said the oil palm cannot pay for their daily life.”

Blog at WordPress.com.

Theme: Mistylook by Sadish.