English title
Ensuring conflict-sensitive conservation and protection of the environment in fragile and conflict situations
Titre en français
Assurer la conservation et la protection de l’environnement en tenant compte des conflits dans les régions en situation de fragilité et de conflit
Título en español
Garantizar la conservación y protección del medio ambiente en situaciones frágiles y de conflicto con una perspectiva sensible a los conflictos
Status
Online discussion
Submission language
Inglés
Working language
Inglés
English files
- 057-V001-Ensuring conflict-sensitive conservation-EN.pdf 2025-04-23 10:50
- 057-V001-Ensuring conflict-sensitive conservation-EN.docx 2025-04-23 10:50
Fichiers en français
- 057-V001-Assurer la conservation en tenant compte des conflits-FR.pdf 2025-04-23 10:51
- 057-V001-Assurer la conservation en tenant compte des conflits-FR.docx 2025-04-23 10:51
Archivos en español
Más información
Proponent (Sponsor)
World Wide Fund for Nature - International ( Switzerland )
Co-patrocinadores
Fondo Mundial Para la Naturaleza (WWF Colombia) ( Colombia )
Conflict and Environment Observatory ( United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland )
Conservation International ( United States of America )
Zoological Society of London ( United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland )
World Wildlife Fund - US ( United States of America )
Memorando explicativo
Preambular Point 3 draws from “Protected zones in context: Exploring the complexity of armed conflicts and their impacts on the protection of biodiversity” (https://international-review.icrc.org/articles/protected-zones-in-context-exploring-the-complexity-of-armed-conflicts-924).
Preambular Point 5 and Operative Point 6 refer to the International Law Commission Principles on the Protection of the Environment in Relation to Armed Conflict (https://legal.un.org/ilc/texts/instruments/english/draft_articles/8_7_2022.pdf). These principles include, inter alia, declaring internationally important ecological areas as protected zones and Indigenous territories as potential no-go zones for military activity. Activities to support their fulfillment could include, e.g., developing an insignia indicating the non-combatant status of conservation actors and incorporating the principles into military guidance and rules of engagement.
Preambular Point 6 refers to two reports: https://iucn.org/resources/publication/conflict-and-conservation and https://iucn.org/our-union/commissions/commission-environmental-economic-and-social-policy/our-work/planet-move.
In Operative Point 3, practices that increase the risk of environmental conflict include subsidizing or allowing the over-extraction of finite resources and environmental degradation; militarizing responses to non-violent environmental conflict; and participating in or enabling the trade of illegally harvested resources. Efforts that promote peace through inclusive conservation include preventing the environmental crime and corruption that drive conflict and fund groups who undermine peace; mainstreaming gender-responsiveness across conservation, to ensure women and other gender-expansive identities are equal partners and leaders in lasting peace; recognizing Indigenous or cultural pathways to peace outside of formal peacebuilding processes; and deepening inclusion, consultation, and consent for conservation decisions, especially those that affect livelihoods or access such as 30x30, OECMs, and other area-based mechanisms.
Operative Point 7 refers to the Evaluation of GEF Support in Fragile and Conflict-Affected Situations (https://www.gefieo.org/evaluations/fragility-2020). These recommendations include developing conflict and fragility risk mitigation strategies during project review and design; improving conflict-sensitive programming and safeguards; and building flexibility for GEF-supported projects to adapt to the rapid and substantial changes common in fragile and conflict-affected situations.
Preambular Point 5 and Operative Point 6 refer to the International Law Commission Principles on the Protection of the Environment in Relation to Armed Conflict (https://legal.un.org/ilc/texts/instruments/english/draft_articles/8_7_2022.pdf). These principles include, inter alia, declaring internationally important ecological areas as protected zones and Indigenous territories as potential no-go zones for military activity. Activities to support their fulfillment could include, e.g., developing an insignia indicating the non-combatant status of conservation actors and incorporating the principles into military guidance and rules of engagement.
Preambular Point 6 refers to two reports: https://iucn.org/resources/publication/conflict-and-conservation and https://iucn.org/our-union/commissions/commission-environmental-economic-and-social-policy/our-work/planet-move.
In Operative Point 3, practices that increase the risk of environmental conflict include subsidizing or allowing the over-extraction of finite resources and environmental degradation; militarizing responses to non-violent environmental conflict; and participating in or enabling the trade of illegally harvested resources. Efforts that promote peace through inclusive conservation include preventing the environmental crime and corruption that drive conflict and fund groups who undermine peace; mainstreaming gender-responsiveness across conservation, to ensure women and other gender-expansive identities are equal partners and leaders in lasting peace; recognizing Indigenous or cultural pathways to peace outside of formal peacebuilding processes; and deepening inclusion, consultation, and consent for conservation decisions, especially those that affect livelihoods or access such as 30x30, OECMs, and other area-based mechanisms.
Operative Point 7 refers to the Evaluation of GEF Support in Fragile and Conflict-Affected Situations (https://www.gefieo.org/evaluations/fragility-2020). These recommendations include developing conflict and fragility risk mitigation strategies during project review and design; improving conflict-sensitive programming and safeguards; and building flexibility for GEF-supported projects to adapt to the rapid and substantial changes common in fragile and conflict-affected situations.
Geographic scope
Global
Marco Mundial de Biodiversidad de Kunming-Montreal
Meta 4: Detener la extinción de especies, proteger la diversidad genética y gestionar los conflictos entre los seres humanos y las especies silvestres
Meta 5: Garantizar que la recolección y el comercio de especies silvestres sean sostenibles, seguros y lícitos
Meta 11: Restaurar, mantener y mejorar las contribuciones de la naturaleza a las personas
Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible
Objetivo 14 - Vida submarina
Objetivo 15 - Vida de ecosistemas terrestres
Objetivo 16 - Paz, justicia e instituciones sólidas
Amenazas y motores de cambio
Cambio climático y episodios climáticos severos
Intrusiones y alteraciones humanas