SEI Asia is contributing to a regional consultation on the ASEAN Declaration on Environmental Rights to improve the current draft and strengthen Indigenous Peoples’ contribution to regional governance on environmental rights.
2024
Photo: Wera Rodsawang / Getty Images.
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is developing its first-ever policy instrument on environmental rights, the ASEAN Declaration on Environmental Rights. A Working Group is developing this policy led by the ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights (AICHR). For more information about the history of the ASEAN Declaration on Environmental Rights, see Environmental-rights.net.
The Working Group accepts civil society’s inputs before the consolidated policy draft is submitted for negotiations among ASEAN Member States through AICHR. This will be the only opportunity for civil society actors outside the Working Group to contribute to the policy. This is a critical opportunity to increase the policy development process’s inclusiveness and meaningful participation, ensuring no groups are left behind. It is imperative that stakeholders that are often overlooked in these processes, such as Indigenous men, women, youth and people with disabilities from the Lower Mekong Region, are included.
Thus, the Asia Centre of the Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI Asia), Asia Indigenous Peoples’ Pact (AIPP), Heinrich Böll Foundation’s Southeast Asia Regional Office (HBF), Samdhana Institute, and USAID–WWF Mekong for the Future are convening a regional consultation on the Declaration to gather input to improve the current draft and strengthen Indigenous Peoples’ contribution to regional governance on environmental rights.
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The workshop aims to facilitate a dialogue and document inputs on the Declaration to ensure the rights of Indigenous men, women, youth and people with disabilities are communicated to the Working Group and relevant stakeholders. The specific objectives include:
The workshop will be held from 20 to 21 April 2024 in Chiang Mai, Thailand. It will be conducted in English, with interpretation services available based on participants’ needs. The workshop will use a mix of facilitation approaches, including interactive, unstructured formats such as ‘unconference’ (where participants have more power over the design and conduct of activities) and structured discussion on specific components of the Declaration.
The workshop discussions will include direct comments and inputs on the draft text of the Declaration. Given the politics and challenges of the development processes behind the Declaration, where certain critical elements of environmental rights are disputed, the workshop will facilitate forward-thinking discussions on actions to allow participants to ideate alternative, strategic inputs with a higher chance of them being included in the final Declaration text as well as to identify entry points for action that promote environmental rights of Indigenous peoples in the ASEAN countries.
In addition, the workshop will include developing action points agreed upon by participants to continue further engagement in developing and implementing the Declaration as it moves along a regional intergovernmental process and becomes an important principle guiding regional action on environmental rights.
In collaboration with partners, we aim to amplify the voices of Indigenous Peoples as rights holders and guardians of the environment. The knowledge products below highlight key outcomes from the consultation workshop and recommendations for ongoing and future policy development.
There is nothing about us without us. Environmental right is human right and they are Indigenous Peoples’ rights.
Pirawan Wongnithisathaporn, AIPP
This video was produced by the Asia Centre of the Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI Asia), based on an Indigenous Peoples’ consultation workshop on the ASEAN Declaration on the Rights to a Clean, Safe, Healthy and Sustainable Environment in April 2024 jointly organized by SEI Asia, Asia Indigenous Peoples’ Pact(AIPP), Heinrich Böll Foundation’s Southeast Asia Regional Office(HBF), Samdhana Institute, and USAID–WWF Mekong for the Future.
In this video, six Indigenous men, women and youth from across Southeast Asia share how they define, experience, and engage with environmental human rights. They highlight the role of Indigenous knowledge and practices and the challenges Indigenous Peoples face in securing their rights to a clean, safe, healthy and sustainable environment in the region.
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