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This article belongs to: TFI63: Women as Stewards of Forests

5.1 Indigenous women’s wisdom and agency (TFI63)

Publication

Authors: Juana Vera-Delgado and Laura Bernard

Editors: Todora Rogelja and Luca Kroese

General - 2025

ISSUE No.: 63

DOI: doi.org/10.55515/TTRW9647

ISSN: 2958-4426

Language: English

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"Our grandmothers crawled so our mothers could walk. Our mothers walked so we could run. And we’re running so our daughters can fly." This quote reflects the resilience of women who have fought against patriarchal and colonial systems. Indigenous women have been central in protecting forests and biodiversity, despite being marginalized.

This article examines the vital role of Indigenous women in forest conservation and biodiversity preservation. It explores how their traditional knowledge and leadership have helped safeguard ecosystems throughout history, even as colonial systems sought to silence them. Today, Indigenous women continue to fight for land rights, environmental justice, and recognition in global policy-making.

Before colonization, women held significant leadership roles, but colonial systems sought to remove them from public life. Despite these challenges, Indigenous women have continued to resist, preserving valuable ecological knowledge. Through legal battles, grassroots movements, and international advocacy, these women prove that leadership in environmental governance must include their voices.

From this article, we learn that recognizing and supporting Indigenous women’s leadership in environmental and land stewardship is key to effective, inclusive, and sustainable forest conservation. Their wisdom and resilience offer crucial insights for shaping future environmental policies. 

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