Skip to content
  • About
  • News
  • Multimedia
    • Infographics
    • Presentations
    • Publications
    • Videos
  • Contact Us
  • GLF Events
    • 2017 Bonn
    • 2017 Jakarta
    • 2016 Marrakesh
    • 2016 London
    • 2015 Paris
    • 2015 London
    • 2014 Lima
    • 2013 Warsaw
  • Careers
  • Share Info

GLF events

  • 2015
  • 2014
  • 2013

Themes

  • Finance
  • Climate Change
  • Food, Water & Energy
  • Sustainable Development
  • Restoration
  • 2017 BONN
  • 2017 JAKARTA
  • 2016 MARRAKESH
  • 2016 LONDON
  • 2015 PARIS
  • 2015 LONDON
MENU
  • About
  • News
  • Multimedia
    • Infographics
    • Presentations
    • Publications
    • Videos
  • Contact Us
  • GLF Events
    • 2017 Bonn
    • 2017 Jakarta
    • 2016 Marrakesh
    • 2016 London
    • 2015 Paris
    • 2015 London
    • 2014 Lima
    • 2013 Warsaw
  • Careers
  • Share Info
Subscribe to our newsletter
Global Landscapes Forum
Global Landscapes Forum
Landscapes for a new climate and development agenda
SHARE INFO
  • Food & Livelihoods
  • Finance
  • Rights
    • Gender
    • Tenure
  • Restoration
  • Measuring Progress
Home › › Article › Page 58

Article

  • Cameroon: a step forward to work with landscapes

    Sunday November 15th, 2015
    • Share
      • Facebook
      • Twitter

    Originally published on CIFOR’s Forests News blog. By John Cannon It’s a daunting challenge whose complexity only continues to intensify: How can we manage the land so that it can provide the food, timber, minerals and other natural resources we need, while also conserving carbon stocks and biodiversity? Enter the landscape approach, designed to manage […]

  • Session: Green Growth – A view from the political front line

    Saturday November 14th, 2015
    • Share
      • Facebook
      • Twitter

    Recent years have seen an expansion of commitments by forest country governments, corporations, donors, and investors to reduce deforestation and land-use emissions. However, these commitments have proven difficult to implement owing to the complex challenges of shifting from business-as-usual to a forest-friendly model of rural economic growth. At our session at the Global Landscapes Forum, […]

  • Top 10 reads on gender and land tenure

    Thursday November 12th, 2015
    • Share
      • Facebook
      • Twitter

    Originally posted on CGIAR WLE’s Thrive blog. By Sophie Theis, Ruth Meinzen-Dick, Agnes Quisumbing, and Chiara Kovarik. This post is part of the “Science on the Pulse” series – a two-part quarterly review on the latest literature on ecosystem services and on gender. What are we actually talking about when we refer to women’s land rights? […]

  • Indonesia’s first ‘conservation province’ — a potential model for change

    Tuesday November 10th, 2015
    • Share
      • Facebook
      • Twitter

    Originally published on the Conservation International Blog. By Bruno Vander Velde  The world watched as wildfires raged in parts of Indonesia last month, filling the skies with smoke and even causing the country’s president to cut short a trip to Washington. Not making headlines, however, is a recent bit of good news from the Southeast […]

  • Sweet: Chocolate goes climate-positive with carbon insetting

    Thursday November 05th, 2015
    • Share
      • Facebook
      • Twitter

    By Patrick Fortyr, Forest Finest Consulting GmbH – CO2OL People love chocolate. Last year’s global consumption of this delicious and timeless treat was approximately 8 million tonnes, as more and more people can afford it. In particular, demand is rising sharply in in the new middle classes of China and India. The chocolate industry is […]

  • Amazon rising: Adaptation begins at home

    Wednesday November 04th, 2015
    • Share
      • Facebook
      • Twitter

    Originally published on CIFOR’s Forest News. By Harry Pearl. For hundreds of thousands of rural families eking out a living in Brazil’s Amazon estuary, living with flooding is a daily reality. But with climate change tipped to hasten sea-level rise, tidal inundation is set to worsen. How can local government help smallholders—known locally as caboclos—to […]

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 56
  • 57
  • 58
  • 59
  • 60
  • …
  • 152
  • Next Page »


FEATURED PUBLICATIONS

  • Outcome Statement of the 2016 Global Landscapes Forum: Climate Action for Sustainable Development

  • 2016 Global Landscapes Forum: The Investment Case Concept Note

  • 2015 Global Landscapes Forum Donor and Partner Report

  • 2015 Global Landscapes Forum Outcome Statement

Multimedia resources

    • Infographics
    • Presentations
    • Publications
    • Videos


With the support of:

STAY UP TO DATE

Subscribe to mailing list


View all newsletters

Latest tweets

  • Error: You currently have access to a subset of Twitter API v2 endpoints and limited v1.1 endpoints (e.g. media post, oauth) only. If you need access to this endpoint, you may need a different access level. You can learn more here: https://developer.twitter.com/en/portal/product

Themes

  • Finance
  • Climate Change
  • Food, Water & Energy
  • Sustainable Development
  • Restoration

PAST EVENTS

Building on the success of the Forest Days and Agricultural and Rural Development Days, the inaugural Global Landscapes Forum took place on the sidelines of the UNFCCC COP19 in Warsaw. In 2014, the second Global Landscapes Forum brought together 1,700 stakeholders in Lima, alongside UNFCCC COP20. The third Global Landscapes Forum in Paris during UNFCCC COP21 was attended by more than 3,000 participants.

GLF 2016  GLF 2015  GLF 2014  GLF 2013

PAST EVENTS

Building on the success of the Forest Days and Agricultural and Rural Development Days, the inaugural Global Landscapes Forum took place on the sidelines of the UNFCCC COP19 in Warsaw. In 2014, the second Global Landscapes Forum brought together 1,700 stakeholders in Lima, alongside UNFCCC COP20. The third Global Landscapes Forum in Paris during UNFCCC COP21 was attended by more than 3,000 participants.

2016 Marrakesh  2015 Paris  2014 Peru 
Global Landscapes Forum | © Copyright 2024
  • About us
  • Contact us
Top

 
Loading Comments...
Comment
    ×