Indigenous Peoples, Afro-descendant Peoples, and local communities live on and manage over 50 percent of the world’s land, but governments recognize their legal ownership rights to just 10 percent. And as investors and corporations have pushed into increasingly remote rural areas seeking land for agribusiness, oil and gas exploration, infrastructure, and renewable energy projects, they have increasingly found themselves coming into conflict with communities over contested land.
These disputes not only jeopardize the rights and livelihoods of local peoples; they also pose a threat to companies and investors as projects can become mired in long and costly conflicts with communities that can lead to work stoppages, stalled investments, and project abandonment.
As the financial and operational costs of insecure Indigenous and community land rights have become increasingly apparent, some progressive companies and investors have committed to addressing land rights in their operations. However, implementing these commitments across sprawling global supply chains has proved challenging.
RRI works to catalyze private sector action on land rights by:
The Interlaken Group is an informal network of individual leaders from influential companies, investors, civil society organizations, governments, and international organizations. The purpose of the Interlaken Group is to expand and leverage private sector action to secure community land rights. Together they develop, adopt, and disseminate new tools and advance new “pre-competitive” mechanisms to accelerate private sector learning on responsible land rights practices. Learn more about the Interlaken Group.