09 Nov 2021

PRESS RELEASE: Communal systems are reclaiming their role to face the challenges of the future

Country
-International/ Global-
Contact
coord@commonlandsnet.org
Link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqz4f36tIuo

  - The Common Lands Network is launching an online platform to make communal systems in the EMENA region (Europe, North Africa and the Middle East) visible and connected.  

 - They believe that in this territory only the tip of the iceberg is known, the vast majority of commons systems are only known at a local level, but they assert that the number of commons is much higher and hope to strengthen their network.

 - Communals are governance systems, most of them thousands of years old, which collectively manage resources such as hunting, fishing, pastures and forests or water.

Tuesday 9 November 2021. "You don't have to look far to discover a communal land near you", says the text of the promotional video that the Common Lands Network has launched today to publicise its new platform.

This organisation, which brings together collectives and like-minded people located in territories as diverse as Europe, North Africa and the Middle East, is clear that communal governance systems are a bet for the future that can help solve the social and environmental challenges we face.

"It is very important to underline that communal systems are not something alien or distant. In Europe, the Middle East and North Africa we have many examples such as the governance of neighbourhood forests, communal pastures, fishermen's guilds, or traditional irrigation systems using irrigation ditches in many rural areas," says Sergio Couto, coordinator of the Network.  "Our objective with the platform is that the commons do not remain isolated or invisible, as has been the case with most of them until now. Although they are part of our collective imagination, they are not given the importance they deserve", he stresses.

According to the coordinator, the communal system "is a system that has endured for centuries" because its basis is precisely to maintain the balance between human beings and their environment. "Unlike other forms of organisation, the communal lands promote the direct involvement of all the neighbours in deciding the rules, thus encouraging greater responsibility of the individual with his or her territory," explains Sergio Couto.

According to the Common Lands Network, "people who form part of a communal system learn the value of the commons and the responsibility involved in managing resources for the present and for the future". In this sense, they believe that it is time to look to the communal to respond to the challenges posed by the current political, climate and energy crisis.

The Communal Lands Network is part of an action plan promoted by ICCA Consortium, Iniciativa Comunales and Trashumancia y Naturaleza and is co-funded by ILC.

For more information:

Sergio Couto, Coordinator of the Common Lands Network and  ICCA Consortium Regional Coordinator for Europe.

+34 619 66 38 67

coord@commonlandsnet.org

Video YouTube 

  - The Common Lands Network is launching an online platform to make communal systems in the EMENA region (Europe, North Africa and the Middle East) visible and connected.  

 - They believe that in this territory only the tip of the iceberg is known, the vast majority of commons systems are only known at a local level, but they assert that the number of commons is much higher and hope to strengthen their network.

 - Communals are governance systems, most of them thousands of years old, which collectively manage resources such as hunting, fishing, pastures and forests or water.

Tuesday 9 November 2021. "You don't have to look far to discover a communal land near you", says the text of the promotional video that the Common Lands Network has launched today to publicise its new platform.

This organisation, which brings together collectives and like-minded people located in territories as diverse as Europe, North Africa and the Middle East, is clear that communal governance systems are a bet for the future that can help solve the social and environmental challenges we face.

"It is very important to underline that communal systems are not something alien or distant. In Europe, the Middle East and North Africa we have many examples such as the governance of neighbourhood forests, communal pastures, fishermen's guilds, or traditional irrigation systems using irrigation ditches in many rural areas," says Sergio Couto, coordinator of the Network.  "Our objective with the platform is that the commons do not remain isolated or invisible, as has been the case with most of them until now. Although they are part of our collective imagination, they are not given the importance they deserve", he stresses.

According to the coordinator, the communal system "is a system that has endured for centuries" because its basis is precisely to maintain the balance between human beings and their environment. "Unlike other forms of organisation, the communal lands promote the direct involvement of all the neighbours in deciding the rules, thus encouraging greater responsibility of the individual with his or her territory," explains Sergio Couto.

According to the Common Lands Network, "people who form part of a communal system learn the value of the commons and the responsibility involved in managing resources for the present and for the future". In this sense, they believe that it is time to look to the communal to respond to the challenges posed by the current political, climate and energy crisis.

The Communal Lands Network is part of an action plan promoted by ICCA Consortium, Iniciativa Comunales and Trashumancia y Naturaleza and is co-funded by ILC.

For more information:

Sergio Couto, Coordinator of the Common Lands Network and  ICCA Consortium Regional Coordinator for Europe.

+34 619 66 38 67

coord@commonlandsnet.org

Video YouTube