Land rights and REDD+ in Colombia. A climate, environment and social justice approach to...
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Contenido de la obra
Registro bibliográfico
Registro
- Título: Land rights and REDD+ in Colombia. A climate, environment and social justice approach to decolonize sustainable development strategies
- Autor: Gutiérrez Sánchez, Esteban
- Publicación original: 2022
- Descripción física: PDF
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Nota general:
- Colombia
- Notas de reproducción original: Digitalización realizada por la Biblioteca Virtual del Banco de la República (Colombia)
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Notas:
- Resumen: Abstract: The CDM (Clean Development Mechanisms), VCM (Voluntary Carbon Markets) and PES (Payment for Ecosystem Services) that support the REDD+ pathway, have long been part of the sustainable development policy arena. The competition for resources to ‘develop for the developed’ has taken many turns (de Soussa Santos, 2006), and the consequent commodification of nature can be traced to different cultures, and back to an unknown history of who was the first. This research asks whether market-based solutions like REDD+ have failed. Some say they have, some that this is part of the process, and others, that –-‘better this than nothing’-, but is there a correct answer? The reason for placing REDD+ inside of CDM-VCM-PES is clarified through the green growth agenda, where forests are one of the main subject of carbon offsets in biodiversity programs. Of the 501 developing countries that have submitted assessments to the UNFCCC, just 15 submitted a summary on how safeguards are being addressed and respected (UNFCCC, 2022). For now, safeguards are the only mechanism for securing rights, but we need to ask which rights, and whose rights. This research uses a decolonizing perspective to address these question in the example of Colombia. The research offers guidance to those that seek to keep applying environmental safeguards as a direct way to address land rights and climate, environmental and social justice. It also attempts to advance the social constructions of different pathways to sustainable development and the strategies for tackling the underlying drivers of climate change from a decolonizing perspective.
- © Derechos reservados del autor
- Colfuturo
- Forma/género: tesis
- Idioma: castellano
- Institución origen: Biblioteca Virtual del Banco de la República
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Encabezamiento de materia:
- Land Rights; REDD+; Decolonization; Climate change policies; Climate justices; Environment justice; Social justice; Interculturality; Power
- Ciencias sociales; Ciencias sociales / Economía; Ciencias sociales / Economía / Economía de la tierra y de la energía; Ciencias naturales y matemáticas; Ciencias naturales y matemáticas / Ciencias de la tierra