Resilience in Unexpected Places

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09/10/2025
16:30 - 17:15
Human-Centred Conservation Pavilion , Sur site

Pourquoi participer

From Namibia’s drylands to Cambodia’s forests and North America’s deserts, discover how communities and conservationists are building resilience through water, wildlife, and wild harvests. These short, powerful case studies reveal how Indigenous knowledge, sustainable use, and innovative management can sustain food security and biodiversity in the face of climate change.

Description de la séance

This session brings together three concise case studies that showcase innovative and community-driven approaches to resilience at the intersection of food security, climate, and conservation. In the arid landscapes of North America, water infrastructure is helping restore desert sheep populations while reinforcing links between wildlife health and food systems. In Namibia, the Nyae Nyae Conservancy — Africa’s first communal conservancy — demonstrates how Indigenous rights, traditional knowledge, and adaptive governance sustain both livelihoods and biodiversity through wildlife quotas, meat distribution, and sustainable harvesting. From Cambodia, the O’Tung Community Protected Area illustrates how the Kavet people’s stewardship of the Malva Nut has strengthened household incomes, governance, gender equity, and forest conservation. Together, these case studies highlight how resilience is built when people are empowered to steward land and resources. Join us for a global journey of learning, followed by a Q&A to connect lessons across regions.
Organised by
Jamma International ( United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland )
Partenaires
Wild Sheep Foundation ( United States of America )
Nyae Nyae Conservancy
O'Tung Community Protected Area

Speaker

Speaker Gray THORNTON

President and CEO, Wild Sheep Foundation

Speaker It SAV

Head of the O’Tung Community Protected Area (CPA), O’Tung Community Protected Area (CPA)

Moderator