A/HRC/51/28
57.
Many indigenous women are experienced decision-makers who have honed their
management skills over generations of family and community leadership. Indigenous
women’s right to self-determination will not be fully realized until they achieve full political
participation. Indigenous women should be welcomed into political and social spaces from
which they have previously been excluded so that their scientific knowledge can be applied
to development and decision-making processes concerning issues that directly impact them.
58.
Inuit matriarchs oversee the protection of the community, teach values, prepare food,
hold knowledge of the seasons and medicines and health practices, and supervise the daily
lives of community members. The matriarchal Garifuna society in Honduras looks to women
as decision makers for the future of the communities, and in Mexico, indigenous women hold
important positions as leaders and protectors of food security and security of land tenure and
resources.52
59.
The Australian Human Rights Commission notes that: “Prior to the imposition of
western patriarchal structures that force gendered hierarchies, women’s knowledges were of
equal worth and importance to those of men.”53
VI. Current threats to indigenous women’s knowledge
A.
Loss of lands, territories and resources
60.
Indigenous women steward nature under tenuous conditions, often with limited access
to and control over lands and resources. Loss of their scientific knowledge occurs as they are
driven from their lands owing to climate change, the creation of protected areas, extractive
projects, violent conflict and economic migration.54 Land is critical to the development and
preservation of deep-rooted practices related to farming, food production and medicine. As
the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues has observed, loss of land and restricted access
to resources makes “it increasingly difficult for them to practise and maintain their
indigenous knowledge systems”.55
61.
Indigenous women are disproportionately impacted by the ecological, economic and
spiritual effects of extractive industries on their lands. Their knowledge is devalued when the
natural resources they steward are exploited without their free, prior and informed consent.
Loss of access to and ownership of lands causes disempowers indigenous women, deprives
them of their community roles and occupations, and threatens their ability to maintain and
transmit their scientific and technical knowledge.
62.
Climate change gives new urgency to the recovery and preservation of indigenous
women’s scientific knowledge as they are disproportionately impacted by its effects,
including drought, desertification, flooding, melting glaciers, rising sea levels, changes to
vegetation and animal populations, and the general degradation of agricultural lands and
natural resources. Worldwide, this means that women have less access to natural resources,
endangering their way of life.
63.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has expressed concern that existing
climate change policies and regulations might lead to access to territories being limited, the
substitution of traditional livelihoods, reduced genetic diversity and harvesting opportunities
and loss of transmission of indigenous knowledge, which in turn may limit the effects of
climate change adaptation measures in many regions. In 2019, the Intergovernmental Panel
emphasized the crucial role played by indigenous peoples in preserving ecosystems and
preventing deforestation, which are key to combating climate change. 56 Nevertheless, the
52
53
54
55
56
Submission by the Government of Mexico.
Submission by the Australian Human Rights Commission.
See A/HRC/45/34/Add.3.
E/C.19/2014/2, para. 33.
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and
Vulnerability – Part A: Global and Sectoral Aspects (2014), ch. 7. See also Climate Change and
Land: an IPCC Special Report on Climate Change, Desertification, Land Degradation, Sustainable
Land Management, Food Security, and Greenhouse Gas Fluxes in Terrestrial Ecosystems (2019).
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