Valuing Allyship: The case for pairing direct and unrestricted funding with solidarity-based allyship for grassroots Indigenous Peoples and forest peoples.
Translations available: Spanyol
The value of channelling much more funding directly to grassroots Indigenous Peoples and forest peoples is gaining recognition in climate and nature funding circles, and rightly so.
Direct and unrestricted funding is crucial to rebalancing power dynamics and finding lasting solutions, but it is rarely enough on its own.
Achieving real change depends on more than how much funding is allocated in this way. It also depends on how those funds are aligned with the self-determined priorities of communities, and the kinds of additional, enabling support needed alongside the funding to maximise impact.
This briefing presents six stories from longstanding partners of Forest Peoples Programme (FPP) in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Each case highlights how transformation is made possible when financial resources are coupled with context-specific, responsive and long-term non-financial support underpinned by deep-rooted, trusting and transparent relationships.
Overview
- Resource Type:
- Briefing Papers
- Publication date:
- 23 September 2025
- Programmes:
- Legal Empowerment Advancing Legal Protections Strategic Legal Response Centre Forest Visions
- Partners:
- Akar Global Inisiatif Chepkitale Indigenous People Development Project (CIPDP) Instituto de Defensa Legal (IDL) Inter Mountain Peoples Education and Culture in Thailand Association (IMPECT) Pga k’nyau Association for Sustainable Development (PASD) Yayasan Masyarakat Kehutanan Lestari (YMKL)