Food Sovereignty Nepal_Tamang
Food Sovereignty Nepal_Sunuwar
Food Sovereignty Nepal_Rai - Wombule
Food Sovereignty Nepal_Rai - Bantawa
Food Sovereignty Nepal_Nepal Bhasa
Food Sovereignty Nepal_Magar
Food Sovereignty Nepal_Limbu
Food Sovereignty Nepal_Gurung
Food Sovereignty Nepal_Tharu
The idea of every human being’s ’right to food’ is nothing new these days, however, looking specifically at this idea in relation to Indigenous Peoples is an exciting and important movement that is gaining steam fast, and rightfully so. International conferences, under the title Indigenous Terra Madre, have been held across the globe first in Sweden in 2011 and then India to explore topics related to Indigenous food sovereignty and better spread the vast agricultural knowledge that has been passed down through Indigenous communities for generations.
Voices of Maize-- South Africa
Voices of Maize, by CS Radio Producer Shaldon Ferris. The importance of maize in South African culture is impossible to overstate. Listen to Shaldon Ferris describe some of the uses of this staple in his culture, and the variety cultures found throughout South Africa.
Indigenous Food As Medicine
Dr. Daphne Miller from the University of California tells us that Indigenous Peoples who eat the diets of their ancestors are immune to many chronic diseases. Indigenous diets are also suited to local environments: farmers farm in a cycle, use different kinds of seeds, conserve water, engaging practices that are not only sustainable and organic but also regenerative.
Produced by Dev Kumar Sunuwar and Jagat Dong from Nepal, for Cultural Survival after attending the Indigenous Terra Madre conference held in November, 2015 in Meghalaya, North East India.
Indigenous Pathways For Wellbeing
Researcher Elizabeth Hacker describes research about how Indigenous individuals create their own frameworks to define "well-being" to counter Western ideas of well-being. She found three important concepts for Indigenous well being are, Meeting basic material needs; social harmony and sense of belonging; and cultural identity. Dev and Elizabeth discuss examples from her research in India and Kenya.
Indigenous Food Sovereignty
Participants discuss what food sovereignty means for Indigenous Peoples. Speakers include Native American activist, and author Dr. Winona Laduke, and Dr. Grazia Borrini-Feyerabend, Global Coordinator of the ICCA Consortium, and David Strelneck, Senior Advisor at Ashoka Foundation.
Produced by Dev Kumar Sunuwar and Jagat Dong from Nepal, for Cultural Survival after attending the Indigenous Terra Madre conference held in November, 2015 in Meghalaya, North East India.
Food Security
Interviewees discusses the main challenges to food security for a rising global population. Dhrupad Choudhury of the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development, argues that Indigenous farmers are doing important work to tackle challenges the world is facing today due to climate change. Indigenous farmers have the building blocks of stress tolerant crops, as well as sustainable agricultural practices because they are dependent only on the resources available to them.
Dr. Winona LaDuke describes her practices experimenting with various types of maize.
The Slow Food Movement
The Slow Food movement was founded in Italy in 1986 to promote an alternative to fast food.
Analee Johnson, Sami, of Sweden, says that the Slow Food movement believes that the food we produce should be good, clean, and fair. She gives an example of marketing Sami traditional food of Reindeer meat.
Bibhudutta Sahu, of the North East Slow Food & Agrobiodiversity Society explains that local food is always the best, because mother nature has been kind enough to provide us what we need.
Threats to Indigenous Land Rights: Interview with Dayamani Barla
Dayamani Barla, Indigenous tribal journalist and activist from Jharkland, India, discusses how Indigenous Peoples have been displaced from their traditional farming lands in the name of dams, mining and other development projects.
Produced by Dev Kumar Sunuwar and Jagat Dong from Nepal, for Cultural Survival after attending the Indigenous Terra Madre conference held in November, 2015 in Meghalaya, North East India.
Indigenous Communities and Food Security
Dev Kumar Sunuwar interviews Dr. Phrang Roy, Khasi indigenous and biodiversity activist, from Shillong, North-East India, on food security among Indigenous Peoples.
Maasai Indigenous People Of Kenya and Their Food Systems
Maasai are semi-nomadic pastoralists who migrate within semi-arid lowlands and more humid uplands to obtain water and pasture. The large majority of them obtain their livelihood through husbandry of cattle, goat and sheep. Their food culture is very unique as they rely on meat, milk and blood from cattle for protein and energy needs. But lately with the gradual loss of elder members of the Maasai community who carry most of this people’s indigenous knowledge, Maasai indigenous communities are losing their customary practices.
Producer : Dev Kumar Sunuwar
Indigenous Food Security In The Arctic
For Indigenous Peoples, food security is necessary for health, and also to maintain a relationship with the earth and its resources.
What is also valuable for Indigenous Peoples is to consume culturally appropriate food. In this radio program, we speak to Dr. Dalee Sambo Dorough and Carolina Behe, as we find out more about food sovereignty and food security amongst Inuit and Peoples in the Arctic.
Producer: Shaldon Ferris (KhoiSan)
Interviewees: Carolina Behe and Dr. Dalee Sambo Dorough(Iñupiat)
Image: Berry picking. Photo by Chris Arend.
Music:
Declaración sobre los Derechos de los Pueblos Indígenas
En este spot te damos a conocer la Declaración sobre los Derechos de los Pueblos Indígenas. Esta declaración creó compromiso de los Estados en el cumplimiento de los Derechos Indígenas. Por ello te invitamos a conocerla y promoverla en tu radio comunitaria.
Foro Permanente para Cuestiones Indígena
Quieres conocer qué es el Foro Permanente para las Cuestiones Indígenas de Naciones Unidas y en qué nos beneficia como Pueblos Indígenas? En este Spot te lo explicamos.
ForoPermanenteDerechosIndígenasONU
Reportes y Recomendaciones del Foro Permanente para Cuestiones Indígenas
En este spot te contamos sobre los reportes y recomendaciones que cada año los 16 miembros del Foro Permanente para las cuestiones Indígenas de la ONU hacen a los Estados al rededor del mundo y a las agencias de Naciones Unidas sobre la situación de Derechos de los Pueblos Indígenas.
Promover Recomendaciones del Foro Permanente para Cuestiones Indígenas de la ONU, responsabilidad de todos y todas
Las recomendaciones del Foro Permanente para cuestiones Indígenas de la ONU no son una forma de forzar a los gobiernos para que cumplan con ellas, pero desde nuestras radios y diversos medios como Pueblos Indígenas necesitamos promover y circular las recomendaciones para que nuestros gobiernos sepan que no estamos solos y que tenemos atención y apoyo por parte de este cuerpo de Naciones Unidas.
Escribamos a la Relatora Especial sobre Derechos Indígenas de la ONU si algo no va bien
Sabes quién es la Relatora Especial sobre Derechos de Pueblos Indígenas de la ONU, y cuál es su papel dentro de Naciones Unidas? En este Spot te lo contamos, además te damos su contacto para que le informes si algo no va bien en tu comunidad en el buen ejercicio de tus Derechos Indígenas.
indigenous@ohchr.org
Relatora Especial sobre Derecho de Pueblos Indígenas en nuestro país
Sabías que la Relatora Especial sobre Derecho de los Pueblos Indígenas puede visitar nuestro país para conocer de cerca la situación de nuestros Derechos Indígenas y usar su reporte para hacernos escuchar delante nuestros Estados? Escucha este Spot donde te damos mayores detalles.