THE BICULTURAL DIVERSITY PROGRAM

In the Biocultural Diversity Program RAPO, Support Indigenous Peoples and local communities to protect and revive biocultural diversity.
In Tanzania more than 88% remaining terrestrial biodiversity lies within land managed or governed by Indigenous Peoples and local communities. Research has shown a clear relationship between a diversity of languages and biodiversity. This is because where Indigenous Peoples and local communities have strong ties to their territories and are able to remain on them and defend them and their cultures from external threats, biodiversity often flourishes. Yet this biocultural diversity and the knowledge and lifeways that protect and enhance it, are rapidly being lost.





RAPO'S RESPONSE
The absence of secure land ownership or tenure for Indigenous Peoples and local communities fuels poverty, social and gender inequalities, food insecurity, conflict and environmental degradation globally. However, when people have secure rights over their land, it helps to address many of these issues.
In addition, the preservation of local cultures is vital to retain the ancestral environmental knowledge that has kept their lands ecologically intact. But despite its importance, funding for protecting and reviving biocultural diversity is severely limited. So, this Biocultural Diversity Program RAPO aimed to support Indigenous Peoples’ and local communities group to protect and revive their biocultural diversity.

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