与社区合作进行森林恢复的5项原则
原住民和当地社区的领导是所有森林保护和恢复工作成功的核心。他们拥有丰富的传统生态知识——这源于几代人靠森林生活、管理森林的经验——为致力于恢复和可持续管理森林景观的项目提供了无与伦比的解决方案和愿景。
Kahea Pacheco (Kanaka 'Ōiwi) is a passionate advocate for Indigenous people’s rights, intersectional environmentalism, and climate justice that puts aloha ʻāina at the heart of solutions. She is a Co-Executive Director at Women’s Earth Alliance (WEA), a 16-year global initiative that empowers women’s leadership to protect the environment, end the climate crisis, and ensure a just, thriving world.
With WEA, Kahea has facilitated legal advocacy partnerships for indigenous women-led environmental campaigns to protect lands, water, and sacred spaces. She also co-led a the development of the “Violence on the Land, Violence on our Bodies” report and toolkit, which provides a critical perspective from Indigenous women and young people on the health and social impacts of extractive industry within their territories, as well as community-developed tools to address environmental violence.
Kahea has a background in law, critical theory and human rights. She serves on the Advisory Council for Daughters for Earth and 1t.org—the trillion trees platform of the World Economic Forum—and is on the Board of Directors of Planet Women.
原住民和当地社区的领导是所有森林保护和恢复工作成功的核心。他们拥有丰富的传统生态知识——这源于几代人靠森林生活、管理森林的经验——为致力于恢复和可持续管理森林景观的项目提供了无与伦比的解决方案和愿景。
Indigenous peoples must be central to developing fair forest stewardship and restoration systems. These principles can help develop community partnerships.