Academic literature on the topic 'Papua Land of Peace'

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Journal articles on the topic "Papua Land of Peace"

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Pamungkas, Cahyo. "The Campaign of Papua Peace Network for Papua Peace Land." Jurnal Ilmu Sosial dan Ilmu Politik 21, no. 2 (December 5, 2017): 147. http://dx.doi.org/10.22146/jsp.30440.

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This article aims to narrate a series of peaceful campaigns conducted by Papua Peace Network (PPN) for Papua Peace Land. This informal network consists of several groups of civil societies, such as religious organizations, ethnic groups, NGOs, and academicians. The PPN has some objectives that are to connect conflicted groups in Papua land, and to help both Papuan people and Indonesian government preparing an inclusive dialogue. This article results from research between 2013 and 2017. The data collection used observation of peaceful campaign of PPN, interviews, and archival research. This research shows that although a series of peaceful campaigns have been conducted by PPN both at the national and local levels between 2013 and 2016, but political violence still increases in Papua land. On another side, the national government only focuses on social and economic development issues, in particular, infrastructure projects, instead of political issues. Government officials involved in peaceful campaigns conducted by PPN had no power enough to implement some peace recommendations due to the national government has no a roadmap to resolve the conflict between Jakarta and Papua peacefully. The article argues that a continuously informal communication between conflicted parties is a necessary condition, but it is not a sufficient condition to create a positive peace. Therefore, the National Government is strongly suggested to implement an inclusive national dialogue with Papuan people.
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Wambrauw, Joram. "Papua Land of Peace As a Humanitarian Program For Local People In Unitary State Republic of Indonesia." Papua Law Journal 2, no. 1 (October 25, 2018): 52–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.31957/plj.v2i1.597.

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This study aims for the actual problems in the field of politics, law and security in the context of Papua Land of Peace. This research is prescriptive legal research with normative juridical approach method in the form of research on the principle with data collection technique through literature study in the form of primary, secondary and tertiary legal material with qualitative analysis of legal materials. The results of the study show that Papua Land of Peace is a humanitarian program to protect the Papuan people who inhabit it, as well as to protect it as citizens of Indonesia in the NKRI container. Therefore it is necessary to be well and carefully identified various matters which are the factors causing the situation in which Papua will not become a Land of peace.
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Tebay, Neles. "'Papua, the Land of Peace': The Interfaith Vision and Commitment for West Papua." Exchange 36, no. 4 (2007): 337–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157254307x225025.

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AbstractIt is possible for all religions to work together for lasting peace. This possibility of interfaith collaboration for peace in the midst of violent has been demonstrated in West Papua, the Western half of the Island of New Guinea. The territory has been a land of violent conflict both under the Dutch and Indonesian rules. The collaboration among the religions, including Islam, Christianity (Catholic and Protestant Churches), Hinduism, and Buddhism, for peace in West Papua was formally begun in 2000. Led by the religious leaders, the interfaith commitment for peace is manifested through the joint statements and activities. All the peace-related activities are now conducted under the motto 'Papua, the Land of Peace', which is also the shared vision of West Papua. This article explores the concept of peace, describes the threats to peace under Indonesian rule, introduces the concept of 'Papua, the Land of Peace' and its underlying values, and looks into interfaith commitment and activities for peace.
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Stefanus, Mahuze. "LAND IS THE “WOMB” OF PAPUAN WOMEN." Jurnal Teologi 11, no. 1 (May 25, 2022): 53–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.24071/jt.v11i01.4595.

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Papua experiences turmoil almost every year and often becomes an interesting subject for public discourse. However, Papuans are powerless when it comes to determining their own future. For sixty years (1962-2022), Papuans have to survive amidst the smell of bloodshed and the sounds of gunshots, demonstrations, lamentations, and other commotions that hinder human development. These have invited various parties to gather and think for solutions for peace. Despite this, the ideology of “NKRI Harga Mati” (Non-negotiable Sovereignty of the Unitary State of the Republic of Indonesia) has gained more popularity than the humane concept of Pancasila. The conflict driven by populist ideology has created scars in the history of the indigenous people of Papua, especially for Papuan women. The 117 years (1905-2022) of the Gospel preached in Papua has not been sufficient to liberate the Papuans. The patriarchy that preaches justice and humanity is likened to a fashion show for false generosity. They cry out for justice and yet they oppress Papuan women. This experience calls for a theological reflection from the lives of Papuan women. In using Delores S. William’s womanist theological framework, the author will discover how God speaks in the history of Papuan women and how God acts through their being.
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Meidinata, Marianus Ivo, and Hendrik Ryan Puan Renna. "THE MEANING OF CARING FOR PAPUA IN THE PERSPECTIVE OF THE 2ND PRECEPT OF PANCASILA IN DRIYARKARA’S VIEW." JURNAL SETIA PANCASILA 2, no. 2 (February 9, 2022): 28–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.36379/jsp.v2i2.203.

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ABSTRACT In this study, the author focuses on the meaning of caring for the people and the land of Papua. This research takes a phenomenological philosophical method with a qualitative approach; and a literature study as a data collection method. The meaning of this concern is seen from the perspective of the second principle of Pancasila according to Driyarkara. The author tries to see the reality of the government's concern for Papua to overcome the humanitarian crisis that exists there. This study finally concluded that order, peace, good material conditions, general welfare and other things that the state organizes for the Papuan people are aimed at humanity – for human development and perfection. This concern for Papua implies that Papuans are also humanitarian activists even though they have suffered injuries. This government's concern is a sign of the country's progress with the creation of Pancasila people who uphold humanity. Several motives encourage this attitude renewal, including love and compassion by viewing Papua as a family. In this case, the conscience of the Indonesian people has returned, especially to the sensitivity of humanity. ABSTRAK Pada studi ini, penulis mengambil fokus pada makna kepedulian kepada masyarakat dan tanah Papua. Penelitian ini mengambil metode filosofis fenomenologis dengan pendekatan kualitatif; dan studi kepustakaan sebagai metode pengumpulan data. Makna kepedulian ini dilihat berdasarkan perspektif Pancasila sila kedua menurut Driyarkara. Penulis mencoba melihat realitas kepedulian pemerintah kepada Papua untuk mengatasi krisis kemanusiaan yang ada di sana. Studi ini akhirnya sampai pada suatu kesimpulan bahwa ketertiban, kedamaian, keadaan material yang baik, kesejahteraan umum dan hal lain yang diselenggarakan negara untuk masyarakat Papua ditujukan untuk perikemanusiaan – untuk perkembangan dan penyempurnaan manusia. Kepedulian kepada Papua ini mengandung makna bahwa Papua juga merupakan penggiat kemanusiaan meskipun mereka telah mengalami luka. Kepedulian pemerintah ini menjadi tanda kemajuan negara dengan terciptanya manusia-manusia Pancasila yang menjunjung kemanusiaan. Ada beberapa motif yang mendorong pembaruan sikap ini antara lain cinta dan belas kasih dengan memandang Papua sebagai keluarga. Dalam hal ini, hati nurani bangsa Indonesia telah kembali khususnya akan kepekaan kemanusiaan.
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McKenna, Kylie. "Land of the Unexpected: Natural Resource Conflict and Peace Building in Papua New Guinea." Business, Peace and Sustainable Development 2016, no. 7 (June 1, 2016): 32–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.9774/gleaf.8757.2016.ju.00004.

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Al-Makassary, Ridwan. "Transnationalism and Transnational Islam in Indonesia With Special Emphasis on Papua." International Journal of Interreligious and Intercultural Studies 2, no. 2 (October 19, 2019): 42–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.32795/ijiis.vol2.iss2.2019.450.

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Papua has experienced the threat of communal harmony between Christians and Muslims regarding the transnational Islam advent in Papua. The Tolikara Incident in 2015 and the latest one the banning of building the minaret of the Al-Aqsha Mosque in Sentani in 2018, to a certain degree, were part of transnational Islam influence in the region with a majority non-Muslim population. The presence of transnational Islam cannot be separated from the emergence of the public sphere in the country after the demise of the Suharto regime in 1998. This paper will explore transnational Islam in Papua by reviewing previous studies and discourse on transnational Islam in Indonesia. At the outset, the author will delve literature review on transnationalism and transnational Islam globally. Afterward, it will discuss the presence of transnational Islam, especially Salafi of Jafar Umar Thalib (JUT) in Jayapura and Keerom that has created tension and hostilities within Muslim communities, as well as toward non-Muslim. No doubt, Salafi faction of JUT has tried to promulgate or disseminate radical Islamic teaching through dakwah (propagation) and other activities that threaten Papua Land of Peace (Papua Tanah Damai). As a result, their presence has gotten resistance from some Islamic mass organizations and non-Muslims.
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Scott, Catherine, and Neles Tebay. "The West Papua conflict and its consequences for the Island of New Guinea: Root causes and the campaign for Papua, land of peace." Round Table 94, no. 382 (October 2005): 599–612. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00358530500331826.

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Webb-Gannon, Camellia. "Effecting Change through Peace Research in a Methodological ‘No-Man’s Land’: A Case Study of West Papua." Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology 18, no. 1 (January 1, 2017): 18–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14442213.2016.1239653.

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Amirullah, Amirullah, Kasjim Salenda, Nurman Said, and Abdul Wahid Haddade. "ESTABILISHING HARMONY BETWEEN RELIGIONS BY THE RELIGIOUS HARMONY FORUM IN PAPUA THE LAND OF PEACE MAQASID SYARI’AH PERSPECTIVE." Jurnal Diskursus Islam 8, no. 1 (April 30, 2020): 21. http://dx.doi.org/10.24252/jdi.v8i1.12805.

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This writing tells about the endeavor of FKUB, or the Religious Harmony Forum in the city of Jayapura in estabilishing harmony between religions in Jayapura-Papua The Land of Peace in Maqasid Syari’ah perpective. This is an analytical descriptive research aimed to explain explicitly about the existence of FKUB in estabilishing the religious harmony according to the Maqasid Syari’ah point of view. The result shows that the effort of FKUB in Jayapura led to five points of priority measurement applied to maintain the harmony between religions. Those are as follows: a) preserving religions in Dharuriyyat (basic needs) level in the effort of estabilishing harmony of religious groups through dialogue in one’s group to be persuasive; b) preserving spirit (Hifz) is a basic need (dharuriyyat). Otherwise, people would fail to present seminars, dialogue, and contain people aspirations; c) preserving intelligence (Hifz al-‘Aql) is obviously fundamental to create harmony; d) preserving successors in daruriyyat level. It is also fundamental for better upcominng future; e) educating relgious figure how to maximally maintin prosperity.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Papua Land of Peace"

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Hernawan, Yohanes Budi. "From the theatre of torture to the theatre of peace: The politics of torture and re-imagining peacebuilding in Papua, Indonesia." Phd thesis, Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/10325.

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This thesis provides the first full-length of scholarly examination of the half century of the politics of torture and peacebuilding frameworks in Papua, Indonesia. It has assembled a data base of 431 reported torture cases for the period 1963-2010 as well as examined 214 testimonies of state actors, survivors and third parties from Indonesia, Australia, Papua New Guinea, the United States, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands. While the current resurgence of scholarly interests on torture largely focuses on the utilitarian nature of torture as part of the war on terror, the findings of this study take a non-utilitarian turn. First, torture has been deployed strategically by the Indonesian state in Papua as a mode of governance. Second, torture constitutes a spectacle of the sovereign by which the sovereign communicates to a broader audience through the public display of the tortured body. Third, torture has constituted a crime against humanity punishable by both Indonesian and International Human Rights Law. Fourth, the five-decade practice of torture with almost complete impunity has constructed a theatre of torture in which the interactions of survivors, perpetrators, and spectators have produced and reproduced contesting narratives of suffering, domination and witnessing. Based on these four conclusions, peacebuilding in Papua can be reconceptualised as developing a theatre of peacebuilding to transform the theatre of torture. The theatre of peacebuilding model reveals that torture has not always entirely and permanently converted a subject into an ‘abject’. Many survivors not only regain their subjectivity but also their agency. They are able to resist the domination of perpetrators and to take control over their own bodies and histories. In this process of regaining agency, memoria passionis (the memory of suffering) may be beginning to push Papua toward a tipping point that is transforming the theatre of torture to a theatre of peacebuilding. The possibility for this transformation is encapsulated in the idea of establishing a permanent Truth and Reconciliation Commission for Papua (TRCP). Memoria passionis has become a converging point that connects the triangulation of the narratives of suffering, domination and witnessing and inverts the triangulation into a new configuration of ‘revolt, healing and solidarity.’ The whole process of theorising peacebuilding based on the concept of memoria passionis as a remedy to the politics of torture in Papua contributes a novel and distinctively Papuan foundation to the theory and practice of peacebuilding in conflict situations like Papua.
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Schönning, Beatrice. "Amnesty as the Price for Peace? : A Comparative Study of Conflict Amnesties as a Tool to Achieve Peace." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för freds- och konfliktforskning, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-313022.

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Amnesties are a common feature in peace negotiations. Since the end of the Second World War, 45% of all bargained solutions to conflict included an amnesty provision (Binningsbø  et al., 2012:732). Even though it is such a common feature in modern conflicts, the research on amnesties in relation to peace is surprisingly scarce (ibid:732). Most scholars have studied the legality of amnesties, their legal implications, and their relation to human rights and democracy (Olsen et al., 2012; Bell, 2008; Freeman & Pensky, 2012). During recent years, a debate has sparked between peacemakers and human rights advocates within the transitional justice literature regarding the justifiability of amnesties as a tool in peace negotiations. The debate is commonly referred to as the peace v. justice debate (Sonnenberg & Cavallaro, 2012). Although several scholars have contributed to the debate, no consensus on if and how amnesties are beneficial for peacebuilding has been established. This paper will contribute to the debate by testing a newly developed theory in a comparative study, and strives to answer the question How do different types of amnesties affect prospects of peace?
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Shaheen, Ayman Abdel Aziz. "Land and land conflict in the Palestinian-Israeli peace process, 1990-1999." Thesis, University of Leeds, 2000. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/375/.

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This thesis examines the importance of the debates and struggle over land in the Oslo Accord and immediately post-Oslo. It does this by first situating the conflict over land in the historical context of the spread of Zionism from the 1880s, culminating in the establishment of the State of Israel in Palestine in 1948. It then reviews and contrasts the policies on land and settlement of the Israeli Labour and Likud parties. The focus of the thesis is an assessment of Israeli settlement policy on the West Bank and Gaza-Strip after the Oslo Agreement of 1993. It examines the sequences of Israeli-Palestinian agreements that have divided Palestinian land into different categories and argues that these categories and the problems they have created have ignored the historical importance of land in the conflict between Israel and Palestine. The thesis argues that the classification of land is intended to further subjugate Palestine to the political and economic dominance of Israel, and that the formulation for discussing land issues undermines the possibility for the establishment of a strong and economically independent Palestinian state. The thesis submits that the persistence of Israeli settlement policy and the manner of Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank has not encouraged the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) to conduct a comprehensive land survey and registration procedure. Moreover. Israeli strategy in the post-Oslo period has been to promote the cantonisation of Palestine to ensure that any future Palestinian state will remain economically weak and politically disjointed.
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Pritchard, Matthew. "Land, power and peace: Land tenure systems and the formalization agenda in Rwanda." Thesis, McGill University, 2011. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=96716.

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Land tenure and agricultural reform are essential components of postwar development. This is especially true in Rwanda, where eighty percent of the population depends on subsistence agriculture in a rural system plagued by declining production and increasing population pressure. Given these challenges, in 2005 the Government of Rwanda introduced an ambitious set of tenure and agriculture reforms designed to replace subsistence farmers with a highly commercialized and professional agricultural sector. While introduced as a 'pro-poor' policy, field data demonstrate that the Government has shifted away from tenure reform as a means to physically consolidate land, and is currently striving to realize economies of scale through mandatory crop specialization. Furthermore, data demonstrate that the Government's desire to consolidate land holdings through tenure and agricultural policies has decreased food and tenure security, restricted farmers' rights and undermined subsistence livelihoods. While decreasing production and increasing conflict over land validate the need to reorganize rural Rwanda, the goals of Government tenure policies, forceful implementation of large-scale changes, and continued marginalization of the most vulnerable groups present a significant challenge to rural reform, and undermine the state's long-term strategy for macro-economic growth.
La réforme du régime foncier et du secteur agricole sont des éléments essentiels du développement en situation d'après-guerre. Ceci est particulièrement vrai au Rwanda, où quatre-vingt pourcent de la population Rwandaise dépend de l'agriculture de subsistance dans un système rural envahi et débordé par une production déclinante et une grande croissance de population. Prenant compte de ces obstacles, en 2005 le Gouvernement Rwandais introduit une série ambitieuse de réformes foncières et agricoles, créés pour remplacer les fermiers de subsistance avec un secteur agricole hautement commercialisé et professionnel. Même si cette nouvelle politique a été introduite supposément «pour les pauvres », des résultats de recherche démontrent que le Gouvernement s'est éloigné de la réforme foncière comme moyen de consolider leurs propriétés, se déplaçant vers la création d'économies d'échelle en imposant des politiques de spécialisation d'espèces partout au Rwanda. De plus, les résultats de travail de terrain démontrent que le désire du Gouvernement de consolider leur territoire foncier à travers de telles politiques fait diminuer la sécurité alimentaire et foncière, limite les droits des fermiers, et décime les moyens de vies de subsistance des Rwandais. Même si une production qui diminue et un conflit de territoire foncier qui s'augmente fait valider la nécessité de réorganiser le Rwanda rural, les buts des politiques foncières du Gouvernement du Rwanda, l'implémentation d'énormes changements par force, et la marginalisation continue des groupes les plus vulnérables présente un grand défi à la réforme rurale, et présente un obstacle à la stratégie à long terme pour une croissance au niveau macro-économique.
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Maddy-Weitzman, Edie. "Waging peace in the Holy Land : a qualitative study of Seeds of Peace, 1993-2004." Thesis, Boston University, 2005. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=845786431&sid=1&Fmt=2&clientId=78691&RQT=309&VName=PQD.

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Subedi, Surya P. "Land and maritime zones of peace in international law." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1993. https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:d87ec164-c5e2-4cbc-b6b4-92b893d0dbd1.

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During the past few decades a number of initiatives have been undertaken both inside and outside the UN to establish Zones of Peace (ZOP) in various parts of the globe. Currently, there are seven declarations and proposals for ZOP relative to the Indian Ocean, the South Atlantic, the South Pacific, the Mediterranean, Southeast Asia, Nepal and Tibet. On the basis of the areas they cover and the legal issues they raise, the first four zones are termed in this thesis 'maritime zones of peace1 and the remaining three 'land zones of peace'. The State practice relative to such zones demonstrates a significant move towards the acceptance of a variety of methods of creating different regimes with differing legal content. Yet there has been very little academic discussion on this subject from a legal point of view. Therefore, this thesis is designed to examine the legal aspects of the concept of ZOP. This study begins by examining the State practice on maritime ZOP and looks at whether the concept of maritime ZOP is consistent with the existing principles of international law, especially the freedom of the seas, and whether the State practice on ZOP has crystallised into a rule of customary international law. In doing so, it will assess the legal status of the UN General Assembly declarations on maritime ZOP. This is followed by an examination of the proposals for land ZOP. The study then assesses the extent to which the principles underlying the traditional concepts such as neutrality or demilitarised zones, as well as similar emerging principles, could be applied to the concept of ZOP. Another line of enquiry pursued in this thesis is into the concept of objective regimes in international law. After establishing that there exists in international law a rule on objective regimes, this thesis argues that the regimes of ZOP can be regarded as candidates for objective regimes. It is asserted that the methods applied to the creation of various ZOP are among the internationally accepted methods of creating regimes of a dispositive character and the regime of ZOP is similar to other regimes which have generally been regarded as objective regimes in international law. This thesis finds that although the ZOP is a distinct notion developed in response to the peculiar problems of a single State or a territorial entity or a geographical region, it draws upon similar traditional doctrines as well as other emerging rules of international law. On the whole, the declarations on ZOP can be viewed as innovative methods designed to consolidate the already extant and the emerging rules of international law, accord concrete meaning to certain general principles and apply them in the ZOP concerned.
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Rosita, Dewi. "Adat Recognition in Merauke Integrated Food and Energy Estate in Papua, Indonesia." 京都大学 (Kyoto University), 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/2433/225718.

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Hajjiri, Mounir A. G., and Mounir A. G. Hajjiri. "A planning proposal for bridging the walls of Jerusalem: a land of peace not a piece of land." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 1991. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/625871.

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Unruh, Jon Darrel 1958. "Land tenure and the peace process in Mozambique: The role of land dispute resolution in "critical resource" areas." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1997. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/282497.

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The recent 16 year civil war in Mozambique dislocated approximately six million people (primarily small-scale agriculturalists) from land resources to which they are now returning and re-claiming; comprising the largest return and re-integration of refugees and displaced persons in the history of Africa. The UN expects to continue its resettlement activities in Mozambique until the year 2000. However re-access to land resources is problematic due to overlapping land claims stemming from the reforming state land tenure system, including a reformulating land law. Land concessions are being granted from different ministries at the national, provincial, and district level with no coordination, enforcement, or mechanisms to resolve competing claims between smallholders and concessionaires. Disputes over land resources between participants in a national versus customary tenure system, and the inability of the two to connect in terms of how such disputes are resolved in ways that are viewed as secure and legitimate (and therefore respected) by participants in both systems, can have especially serious repercussions in periods of recovery from armed conflict. The intersection of land tenure system (including formal and customary "laws") and identity is crucial in this regard. This dissertation examines the role "critical resource" tenure following Mozambique's war, and how the conflict between reformulating customary and state land tenure systems aggravates the 'disconnect' between state and customary identities, and works against the peace process underway in the country. In the wake of the Somalia debacle, the UN and the international community are compelled to examine new operational modalities that specifically address the issues that can jeopardize a peace process. This dissertation makes the argument that land tenure in critical resource areas following armed conflict is such a problematic issue, and that attention to this issue needs to become an integral part of the peace process in societies where agriculture is fundamental to recovery.
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Lundgren, Linnea. ""Our Silence Would Be Criminal" : The Christian Churches' Work For Peace and Ecumenism in the Holy Land." Thesis, Ersta Sköndal högskola, Institutionen för diakoni, kyrkomusik och teologi, 2014. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:esh:diva-3939.

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Books on the topic "Papua Land of Peace"

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Siregar, Latifah Anum. Menuju Papua tanah damai: Perspektif non Papua. Jayapura, Papua, Indonesia: Aliansi Demokrasi Untuk Papua, 2013.

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Yala, Charles. Land in Papua New Guinea. Boroko, Papua New Guinea: National Research Institute, 2007.

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Yala, Charles. Land in Papua New Guinea. Boroko, Papua New Guinea: National Research Institute, 2007.

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Amankwah, H. A. Land law in Papua New Guinea. Sydney: LBC Information Services, 2001.

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Guinea, Papua New. Papua New Guinea revised land act. [Papua New Guinea: s.n., 1988.

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Jones, L. T. Land mobilisation in Papua New Guinea. Canberra, ACT: Asia Pacific Press, 2001.

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Reconciliation and peace: Interfaith endeavours for peace in West Papua. Goroka, Eastern Highlands Province, Papua New Guinea: Melanesian Institute, 2012.

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Rebecca, Adams, and Centre for Strategic Studies New Zealand., eds. Peace on Bougainville: Truce Monitoring Group = Gudpela nius bilong peace. Wellington, N.Z: Victoria University Press in association with the Centre for Strategic Studies, New Zealand, 2001.

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Fingleton, Jim. Customary land registration in Papua New Guinea. [Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea: Institute of National Affairs, 2005.

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Land and livelihoods in Papua New Guinea. North Melbourne, Vic: Australian Scholarly Publishing, 2015.

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Book chapters on the topic "Papua Land of Peace"

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Tuck, Christopher. "Peace and stability operations." In Understanding Land Warfare, 168–92. 2nd ed. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003096252-10.

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Tuck, Christopher. "Peace and stability operations." In Understanding Land Warfare, 168–92. 2nd ed. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003096252-10.

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Seton-Watson, Hugh. "Land and Peasants." In Neither War Nor Peace, 103–30. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003248521-7.

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Stumpf, T. S., and C. L. Cheshire. "The land has voice: understanding the land tenure – sustainable tourism development nexus in Micronesia." In Peace Through Tourism, 395–411. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003299578-26.

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Pamungkas, Cahyo. "Decolonising the (Indonesian) “Peace Concept” in West-Papua." In Decolonising Peace and Conflict Studies through Indigenous Research, 195–214. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-6779-4_11.

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Mirfendereski, Guive. "Peace on Land, Peace at Sea (1952–1977)." In A Diplomatic History of the Caspian Sea, 171–73. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230107571_37.

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Casertano, Stefano. "From peace to conflict (and back)." In Our Land, Our Oil!, 71–90. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-531-19443-1_3.

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Pamungkas, Cahyo. "Can Infrastructure-Based Development Bring Peace to West Papua?" In Decolonising Conflicts, Security, Peace, Gender, Environment and Development in the Anthropocene, 691–713. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-62316-6_25.

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"Jakarta And Jayapura: The Dialogue Of Religions And ‘Papua, Land Of Peace’." In Religion and Retributive Logic, 17–42. BRILL, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/ej.9789004178809.iv-375.7.

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"Unalienated land." In Land Law and Policy in Papua New Guinea, 84. Routledge-Cavendish, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781843144724-20.

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Conference papers on the topic "Papua Land of Peace"

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Hazenbosch, Mirjam. "Sustainable Land Use for Smallholder Farming Communities in Papua New Guinea." In 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. Jyväskylä: Jyvaskyla University Open Science Centre, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107736.

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Kesaulija, Francina F., Marlon Ivanhoe Aipassa, Muhammad Sumaryono, and Ali Suhardiman. "Modeling Land Cover Change Using Markov Chain-Cellular Automata in Sorong, West Papua Province." In Joint Symposium on Tropical Studies (JSTS-19). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/absr.k.210408.026.

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sitorus, Herowati, Rogate Artaida Tiarasi Gultom, Megawati Manullang, Manusiar Hernawati Sitorus, and Roy Charly Sipahutar. "University Student's Perception of Jeremiah in New Normal Era: The controversy of Jeremiah's Calling as A Prophet." In International Conference of Education in the New Normal Era. RSF Press & RESEARCH SYNERGY FOUNDATION, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31098/iceiakn.v1i1.242.

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This article describes how a great prophet, Jeremiah, who was chosen by God, worked among the Israelites who were living in exile. During his ministry, he received a lot of criticism from other prophets; there was a conflict in the news. In writing this article, a constructive theological approach was carried out for students in understanding the differences in the teachings conveyed by Jeremiah and the other prophets. This approach will explain how the content of Jeremiah's teaching is a message of peace that can be received by the Israelites as immigrants in a foreign land. How do students, as newcomers to a new place, adapt to the new context and lifestyle to feel peace?
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Crook, Howard, and Sergey Birdus. "Velocity model building and depth imaging for complex areas with shallow and deep velocity anomalies: Papua Province (Indonesia) examples, Mogoi 2D land PSDM project." In SEG Technical Program Expanded Abstracts 2003. Society of Exploration Geophysicists, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1190/1.1817776.

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Bray, Don E., and G. S. Gad. "Establishment of an NDE Center at the Papua New Guinea University of Technology: Scope and Objectives." In ASME 1997 Turbo Asia Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/97-aa-065.

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Papua New Guinea lies just north of Australia (Fig. 1). It is a developing island nation, with 462,839 km of land area, a population of 3.9 million people, and vast natural resources (Compton’s Interactive Encyclopedia, 1996). It is the largest island in the Oceania region of the world, which also includes Fiji, the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu. Most of these islands share similar resources, and prudent development of the resources requires utilization of nondestructive evaluation (NDE). NDE provides the means for flaw detection and size assessment, as well as evaluation of material degradation such as corrosion and hydrogen attack. These are factors which affect the service life of components and systems. Being aware of the state of degradation of these components and systems will enable cost effective maintenance, and reduce costly and dangerous failures. Recognizing the need for NDE expertise, the Papua New Guinea University of Technology at Lae has initiated a Center for Nondestructive Evaluation. Once operational, the center should serve the entire Oceania region, and provide resources, trained students and expertise that will enable the growth of the NDE industry within that area. It is widely accepted that NDE adds value to a product or process, not just cost. The amount of value is directly related to the engineering education of the personnel making NDE decisions. The growth of the NDE industry in these South Pacific Islands will add to the economy, as well as aid in the further creation of a population of engineers who are well educated in NDE.
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Ungureanu, George Daniel. "Romania, Bulgaria and the Dobrujan issue in the first year of the Great War." In 8th International e-Conference on Studies in Humanities and Social Sciences. Center for Open Access in Science, Belgrade, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.32591/coas.e-conf.08.08105u.

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The problem of the Dobrujan land frontier between the Bulgarian and Romanian national states, which officially came up after the San Stefano and Berlin (1878) peace treaties and was aggravated by the Peace of Bucharest (1913), dominated the bilateral relations for a few decades. The hereby study focuses on the period August 1914 – September 1915, when both South-Eastern European states were neutral towards the Great War. This context led to various proposals, projects and scenarios concerning the Romanian-Bulgarian relations and implicitly related to the fate of Dobruja. Our effort deals with three levels: the positions of the Great Powers, their relations with Bucharest and Sofia, and the direct relations between the two South-Eastern European states. Chronologically, this period is divided into several stages, marked by the Ottoman Empire’s entry in the war (1 November 1914), the deadlock of the negotiations between Bulgaria and the Entente (March 1915), Italy’s option to renounce neutrality (23 May 1915) and the onset of the final talks concerning Bulgaria’s option to join the Central Powers (July 1915). Among the most relevant sources, we need to mention the Romanian Military Archives from Piteşti and the works of synthesis written by the Bulgarian historians Georgi Markov, Ivan Ilčev and Žeko Popov, dealing with the period 1913-1919.
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Gasser, Pierre-Yves, M. Bock, S. Smith, P. Schut, T. Martin, and D. Neilsen. "The use of the land suitability rating system to assess the impacts of climate change on spring seeded small grains in the Peace River Alberta region." In 2017 Spokane, Washington July 16 - July 19, 2017. St. Joseph, MI: American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.13031/aim.201701630.

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Yamazaki, Tetsuo, Yosuke Takeda, Rei Arai, and Naoki Nakatani. "Economic Seafloor Massive Sulfide Mining by Japan’s Model." In ASME 2016 35th International Conference on Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/omae2016-54575.

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Because of the higher Au, Ag, and Cu contents, seafloor massive sulfides (SMS) have received much attention as future commercial mining targets by private companies and nations. One of them, Solwara 1 Project in Papua New Guinea (PNG), is scheduled to start the commercial mining operation from 2018. Because the mining site is inter-island area and almost no cost is necessary for the waste disposal in PNG, the economy of the mining is expected very well. In contrast with this, because all the SMS distribution sites in Japan locate outer ocean areas and the waste disposal cost on land in Japan is very expensive, the economy of SMS mining in Japan is quite negative. In order to overcome the problems, a self-standing riser with flexible link to the sea surface platform and a primary ore separation on the seafloor prior to the ore lift-up are proposed. The improved SMS mining concept named Japan’s model is examined.
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Morgan, Charles L. "The Status of Marine Mining Worldwide." In ASME 2009 28th International Conference on Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering. ASMEDC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/omae2009-80048.

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Metals are fundamental components of modern society worldwide, and, despite the current economic downturn, we know we will be faced with ever increasing demands and ever-shrinking supplies. Efforts to achieve sustainable supplies of minerals must include efforts to expand the supply. About 60% of the ocean surface consists of the ocean floor, so it is reasonable to expect that deep ocean minerals could contribute significantly to the world supply. Human efforts to recover minerals have thus far concentrated almost exclusively on land-based resources, so it is reasonable to postulate that marine minerals might offer better prospects for future mineral supplies than land prospects. Currently, we know of at least six separate categories of marine minerals: 1. Aggegrate sand and gravel deposits; 2. Placer deposits of relatively high value minerals (gold, diamonds, tin, etc) hosted in aggegrates; 3. Biogenically derived phosphate deposits; 4. Sediment-hosted (manganese nodules) and hard-rock hosted (ferromanganese crusts) ferromanganese oxide deposits; 5. Sediment-hosted methane hydrate deposits; and 6. Hydrothermally derived sulfide deposits of copper, gold, nickel, zinc, and other metals. Thanks primarily to the engineering developments made by the offshore oil industry and the computer-science advances that have revolutionized much of modern society, the technology is in place for most of the tasks of deep seabed mining. The objective here is not to provide a general status update regarding marine minerals technology, but simply to demonstrate, using the best example available to date (the Nautilus Minerals venture in the Territorial Waters of Papua New Guinea) that the technology is in place and ready to go. Development of marine minerals has both the curse and blessing of taking place in the ocean. Since the 1970’s and before, the marine environment has taken on a public aura reserved more commonly for religious beliefs. This aura poses substantial obstacles to any marine development efforts. At the same time, a basic advantage of marine mineral developments is that nobody lives there. Thus, marine mining activities will not conflict with most normal human activities. Marine mining proposals should be subjected to thorough impact assessment analysis, but it is also critical that policymakers take steps to provide a level playing field for marine developments that encourages objective comparisons with alternative land-based proposals for supplying needed mineral resources. Governments should foster reasonable access to the marine mineral resources under their jurisdiction while also supporting incentive policies and related research programs.
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Sarwanto, P. "“PIRAMIDA TINGGI, A State of the Art to Fulfill Obligation of Forestry Permit on Watershed Rehabilitation at PT Pertamina Hulu Mahakam”." In Digital Technical Conference. Indonesian Petroleum Association, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.29118/ipa20-g-263.

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Among other obligations imposed under the forestry permit, watershed rehabilitation planting is perceived by the upstream oil and gas sector as the most complex challenge to conquer. Despite its poor track in fulfilling timeline and required result, there are also other challenges to consider, for instance lack of critical location, weather, fire, land tenure, community habit and capability, and cost optimization. In attempt to respond these challenges, an innovation in management system is constructed at PT Pertamina Hulu Mahakam, embracing and tailoring all related challenges, difficulties, and complexities, escalating the activity to be beyond compliance. So that it will be able to deliver more than merely avoid the identified potential risks towards company. The management system, called PIRAMIDA TINGGI (Pemberdayaan Masyarakat untuk Melestarikan Hutan di Dunia demi Ketahanan Energi Nasional), actively involves government, community, and business sector as equilateral triangle that work together to perform watershed rehabilitation planting. Developed using ISO 9001:2015 process approach namely PDCA (Plan-Do-Check-Act), the PIRAMIDA TINGGI system is in line as well with NAWACITA (President Joko Widodo’s vision, mission and program). To encounter other issue found during field work, this system is equipped as well with another innovation tool named PARIDA, a geospatial mobile-desk top-web application that easily able to map and identify vegetation in real time for further geo-analyzing multi-purposes, to be operated by local community. Full set implementation of this system has benefitted all parties. To Company in form of significant cost efficiency around 13.9 MUSD and 7 days’ faster result delivery besides obligation fulfillment, for others in form of broader advantage of proven sustainability project that has gave contribution to 5P (People, Planet, Prosperity, Partnership and Peace), objectives required by UN Sustainable Development Goals 2030.
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Reports on the topic "Papua Land of Peace"

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West, Larry R. An Assessment of the Israeli-Arab Peace Process: Could It Be So Simple as 'Land for Peace?'. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, December 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada326431.

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., Aenunaim, Sudiyah Istichomah, and Gamma Galudra. Result of Land Use Planning and Land Administration (LULA) Implementation in South Sumatra, East Kalimantan, Central Java and Papua. World Agroforestry Centre, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5716/wp18010.pdf.

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Adriansen, Hanne Kirstine. The geography of peace: Egyptian land reclamation and agri-cultural cooperation with Israel. Aarhus University, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/aul.111.100.

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Rahayu, Subekti, and Sidiq Pambudi. Tree diversity and carbon stock in various land use systems of Jayapura, Jayawijaya and Merauke Districts, Papua Province. World Agroforestry Centre, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5716/wp17359.pdf.

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Valencia, Sandra C. WFP’s Contributions to Improving the Prospects for Peace in the Central American Dry Corridor: Spotlight on Climate Change. Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, November 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55163/aefi7913.

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This report explores the linkages between climate change, food security and conflict in the Central American Dry Corridor region. Specifically, the report analyses how climatic shocks and stresses affect food security and the risk of conflict in the Dry Corridor, through case studies of Guatemala and Honduras. In addition, the research analyses if, and how, the World Food Programme’s (WFP) Food for Assets programmes, which seek to increase resilience, are mitigating conflict risk, and WFP’s role in longer-term peacebuilding efforts against the backdrop of negative climate trends. The research was conducted in a selection of WFP’s intended beneficiary communities considered part of the Dry Corridor in the departments of Chiquimula and Zacapa in Guatemala and in the departments of La Paz and Santa Barbara in Honduras. Two theories of change are proposed for how WFP can improve the prospects for peace and reduce conflict sensitivity risks through its Food for Assets Resilience programming in the Dry Corridor: one related to land tenure and a second related to water governance. The research was part of a wider knowledge partnership between SIPRI and WFP. The partnership aimed to inform WFP’s potential contributions to improving the prospects for peace and how to address these through WFP’s programming.
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From Risk and Conflict to Peace and Prosperity: The urgency of securing community land rights in a turbulent world. Rights and Resources Initiative, February 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.53892/sdos4115.

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Amid the realities of major political turbulence, there was growing recognition in 2016 that the land rights of Indigenous Peoples and local communities are key to ensuring peace and prosperity, economic development, sound investment, and climate change mitigation and adaptation. Despite equivocation by governments, a critical mass of influential investors and companies now recognize the market rationale for respecting community land rights. There is also increased recognition that ignoring these rights carries significant financial and reputational risks; causes conflict with local peoples; and almost always fails to deliver on development promises.
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Collective Tenure Rights in Colombia’s Peace Agreement and Climate Policy Commitments. Rights and Resources Initiative, September 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.53892/yzuu8847.

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Between June and August 2016, the Colombian government made two announcements that will profoundly change the country. After four years of peace negotiations with the FARC guerillas, President Santos announced the Acuerdo final para la terminación del conflicto y la construcción de una paz estable y duradera [Final Peace Accord for the Conclusion of the Conflict and the Construction of Stable and Lasting Peace], moving the country toward the end of one of the longest internal conflicts in the history of the Americas. In the months prior to this announcement, the Ministerio de Ambiente y Desarrollo Sostenible [Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development] also officially launched the Visión Amazonía 2020 Program, a low-carbon sustainable development model for the Amazon region. This program is part of the country’s commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 20 percent by the year 2030. Both announcements, linked to profound historic changes in the country, will generate new proposals related to sustainable development, agriculture, and access to land. They will also raise the question of what institutional changes are needed to effectively respond to these new challenges and opportunities. Given that the implementation of both of these initiatives will coalesce in the territories of the various rural and ethnic populations in the country, it will be necessary to directly address the crucial issue of guaranteeing indigenous and Afro-descendant communities’ collective rights. This issue will be central to effective implementation of the post-peace accord and climate policies, as well as in achieving economic, social, and environmental sustainability.
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