Indigenous peoples and climate change: From victims to change agents through Decent Work

This report rejects the characterization of Indigenous people as “victims”. It states that indigenous peoples, numbering over 370 million worldwide , “are at the vanguard of running modern green economies”, and “if they have access to decent work opportunities; if they are empowered to participate i...

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Other Authors: International Labour Organization (ILO) (Author)
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: ILO 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digital.library.yorku.ca/yul-1121503/indigenous-peoples-and-climate-change-victims-change-agents-through-decent-work
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spelling ftyorkunivdc:oai:yul:yul_1121503 2023-05-15T16:15:54+02:00 Indigenous peoples and climate change: From victims to change agents through Decent Work International Labour Organization (ILO) (Author) March 2017 https://digital.library.yorku.ca/yul-1121503/indigenous-peoples-and-climate-change-victims-change-agents-through-decent-work eng eng ILO yul:1121503 Reproduced with permission of the ILO, granted May 2017. Copyright remains with the ILO First Nations report Text 2017 ftyorkunivdc 2021-07-18T22:42:10Z This report rejects the characterization of Indigenous people as “victims”. It states that indigenous peoples, numbering over 370 million worldwide , “are at the vanguard of running modern green economies”, and “if they have access to decent work opportunities; if they are empowered to participate in decision making; if their rights are protected; and if policies address their social, economic and environmental vulnerabilities while honing their positive potential as partners, workers, entrepreneurs and innovators, indigenous peoples will become empowered agents of change who can play a vital role in spurring green growth and combating climate change.” Report First Nations York University Digital Library
institution Open Polar
collection York University Digital Library
op_collection_id ftyorkunivdc
language English
topic First Nations
spellingShingle First Nations
Indigenous peoples and climate change: From victims to change agents through Decent Work
topic_facet First Nations
description This report rejects the characterization of Indigenous people as “victims”. It states that indigenous peoples, numbering over 370 million worldwide , “are at the vanguard of running modern green economies”, and “if they have access to decent work opportunities; if they are empowered to participate in decision making; if their rights are protected; and if policies address their social, economic and environmental vulnerabilities while honing their positive potential as partners, workers, entrepreneurs and innovators, indigenous peoples will become empowered agents of change who can play a vital role in spurring green growth and combating climate change.”
author2 International Labour Organization (ILO) (Author)
format Report
title Indigenous peoples and climate change: From victims to change agents through Decent Work
title_short Indigenous peoples and climate change: From victims to change agents through Decent Work
title_full Indigenous peoples and climate change: From victims to change agents through Decent Work
title_fullStr Indigenous peoples and climate change: From victims to change agents through Decent Work
title_full_unstemmed Indigenous peoples and climate change: From victims to change agents through Decent Work
title_sort indigenous peoples and climate change: from victims to change agents through decent work
publisher ILO
publishDate 2017
url https://digital.library.yorku.ca/yul-1121503/indigenous-peoples-and-climate-change-victims-change-agents-through-decent-work
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation yul:1121503
op_rights Reproduced with permission of the ILO, granted May 2017.
Copyright remains with the ILO
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