Young indigenous voices address climate change at UN forum

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Indigenous youth leaders shared their unique challenges and solutions at this year's United Nations forum on Indigenous issues.

Taylar Dawn Stagner reports for Grist.


In short:

  • This year's United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues focused on listening to Indigenous youth's interests and concerns.
  • The young leaders from across the globe expressed a wide array of concerns, from the dual vulnerabilities of Indigenous and LGBTQ+ communities in Greenland due to climate change to struggles for self-determination exacerbated by external political pressures and environmental concerns.

Key quote:

“When we listen to the land, the land will listen to us. It’s a language. Climate change is creating a language barrier.”

— Jakirah Telfer, representative of the Kaurna peoples in Australia.

Why this matters:

Many indigenous communities rely on natural resources for their livelihoods—such as hunting, fishing and agriculture. Changes in climate patterns can lead to resource scarcity, affect food security and disrupt traditional economic activities.

We need to stop compartmentalizing the environment, family and culture as separate problems, argued Diné researcher Kevin Patterson in this 2023 essay.

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