By ahnationtalk on June 1, 2023
By ahnationtalk on June 1, 2023
By ahnationtalk on June 1, 2023
By ahnationtalk on June 1, 2023
By ahnationtalk on June 1, 2023
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by ahnationtalk on October 1, 2019412 Views
September 30, 2019
Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim is President of the Association for Indigenous Women and Peoples of Chad (AFPAT). An expert in how indigenous peoples adapt to and mitigate climate change, she is also the former co-chair of the International Indigenous Peoples Forum on Climate Change and SDG Advocates.
Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, from the Mbororo pastoralist community in Chad, has spent a decade trying to get international policy on climate change to consider perspectives from indigenous communities like her own. In the lead up to the historic 2015 climate-change meetings in Paris, she was designated as co-chair of the International Indigenous Peoples Forum on Climate Change, established in 2008 as the caucus for indigenous people participating in the U.N. Climate Summit. And she has worked with the government of Chad on their Nationally Determined Contributions plan to cut greenhouse gas emissions in a feasible way.
Ibrahim tells TIME what lessons indigenous communities hold for the rest of the world in protecting the environment and mitigating and adapting to climate change.
Read More: https://time.com/5686184/indigenous-lesson-climate-change/
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Categories: | Environment, Mainstream Aboriginal Related News |
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This article comes from NationTalk:
https://nationtalk.ca
The permalink for this story is:
https://nationtalk.ca/story/we-know-how-to-keep-the-balance-of-nature-why-including-indigenous-people-is-vital-to-solving-climate-change-time
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