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INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES, TOURISM AND BIODIVERSITY WORKSHOP SERIES:

INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES, TOURISM AND BIODIVERSITY WORKSHOP SERIES: NEW INFORMATION AND WEB-BASED TECHNOLOGIES. PACIFIC ISLANDS WORKSHOP Apia, Samoa, 3-5 November 2008. OVERVIEW. 1. CBD Biodiversity and the Convention Role of the Secretariat Relevant CBD decisions 2. WORKSHOP

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INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES, TOURISM AND BIODIVERSITY WORKSHOP SERIES:

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  1. INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES, TOURISM AND BIODIVERSITY WORKSHOP SERIES: NEW INFORMATION AND WEB-BASED TECHNOLOGIES PACIFIC ISLANDS WORKSHOP Apia, Samoa, 3-5 November 2008

  2. OVERVIEW 1. CBD Biodiversity and the Convention Role of the Secretariat Relevant CBD decisions 2. WORKSHOP Specific objectives Expected results Outcomes of the previous workshop

  3. BIODIVERSITY IS... Biological diversity - or biodiversity - is the term given to the variety of life on Earth. It is the result of billions of years of evolution, shaped by natural processes and, increasingly, by the influence of humans. It forms the web of life of which we are an integral part and upon which we so fully depend.

  4. BIODIVERSITY IS... • Variety of species • Genetic differences • Variety of ecosystems

  5. WHY IS BIODIVERSITY IMPORTANT FOR YOU AND THE WORLD? Protecting biodiversity is in our self interest, providing the goods and services that sustain our lives including: • Provision of shelter and building materials • Stabilization and moderation of the Earth's climate • Purification of air and water • Provision of food, fuel and fibre • Cultural and aesthetic benefits • etc

  6. WHAT ARE THE CHALLENGES FACING BIODIVERSITY? Species have been disappearing at up to 1000 times the natural rate • An estimated 34,000 plant and 5,200 animal species face extinction, including one in eight birds and one third of all amphibians • 20% of known bird species have already disappeared • 41% of mammals are in decline and 28% are under direct threat • 45% of the Earth's original forests are gone. Forest areas of about four times the size of Belgium are being lost every year. Human activities are creating the greatest wave of extinction since the natural disaster that wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago

  7. The Convention on Biological Diversity Opened for signature in Rio in 1992 (Earth Summit) First global, comprehensive agreement to address all aspects of biological diversity: genetic resources, species, and ecosystems It recognises - for the first time that the conservation of biological diversity is 'a common concern of humankind' and an integral part of the development process. Ratified by 191 countries (including the European Union)

  8. The CBD is an international governmental agreement • The Parties are the primary audience • The CBD Secretariat has a specific mandate : • • To service CBD meetings • •To report to the Conference of the Parties (COP) • • To coordinate with relevant international bodies • •To perform functions requested by the COP

  9. Interactions at various levels

  10. The Convention on Biological Diversity Objectives (Article 1): The conservation of biological diversity The sustainable use of its components The equitable sharing of benefits arising out of the utilization of genetic resources →

  11. The Convention on Biological Diversity and Traditional knowledge Governments acknowledged in the Preamble: The close dependance of many indigenous and local communities on biological resources and the desirability of sharing equitably benefits of traditional knowledge, innovation and practices relevant to the conservation of biological diversity and the sustainable use of its components.

  12. Article 8(j) Traditional Knowledge • Parties have undertaken to: • Respect, preserve and maintain knowledge, • innovations and practices of indigenous and • local communities embodying traditional • lifestyles relevant for the conservation and • sustainable use of biological diversity and • Promote their wider application with • the approval and involvement of the holders • of such knowledge, innovations and practices • and • Encourage the equitable sharing of the • benefits arising from the utilization of such • knowledge, innovations and practices

  13. Other relevant CBD programmes of work • Indigenous and Local Communities (ILC) Article 8(j) • Tourism • Islands • Invasive and alien species • Protected Areas • Information and Communication Technologies

  14. Why a Workshop on ILC, TOURISM AND BIODIVERSITY : NEW INFORMATION AND WEB-BASED TECHNOLOGIES In paragraph 7 of decision IX/13 E, on Article 8(j)and related provisions, the Conference of the Parties requested the Executive Secretary to convene, subject to the availability of financial resources, further regional and sub-regional workshops on community-friendly communication tools on traditional knowledge related to the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity

  15. SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES • development and management of biodiversity-friendly tourism activities; • 2) new information and web-based technology capacity of ILC tourism operators; • 3) marketing and development of the culturally and biologically sustainable aspects of indigenous tourism products and experiences via the Internet; • 4) develop network and exchange information; • 5) use successful tools from the first workshop

  16. The participants are expected to 1) improve their web-based technological capacities, thereby increasing their ability to market and develop their sustainable tourism products; 2) more effectively portray to their target market through their website their understandings of and unique connections to conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity; 3) use their websites as internal communication and management tools within their local communities and to connect them with broader stakeholder networks;

  17. Feedbacks from the Arctic“This is more than timely for me: the tools for our web site will be shared and presented to my board; we will create a focus group on what needs to be done.”“Biodiversity goes hand in hand with ethnodiversity”“The workshop demonstrates the aboriginal communities can bring to the world and can be source of inspiration to non-indigenous.”

  18. *concrete tools/improved websites *web portal for the region*exchange of services*networking and partnerships*a scientific and collective paper on the workshop methodology *knowledge and vision sharing within the region and with other regions PRACTICAL OUTPUTS

  19. THANK YOU!

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