Frontlines Forum: What's It All About?
Many small island, rural and indigenous communities are already facing the first impacts of climate change. Their high
vulnerability relates to their reliance upon resource-based livelihoods and the locations and configurations of their
lands and territories.
Ironically, despite broad recognition that small island, Arctic, high altitude and other vulnerable communities are on
the frontlines of climate change, their voices have remained largely on the sidelines of climate change debates. Indeed,
this exclusion has generated discord and protests by indigenous peoples and community representatives at recent
international conferences and meetings on climate change.
In response to this outcry, the grassroots Internet forum On the Frontlines of Climate Change was launched by UNESCO, in
partnership with the Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (SCBD), the Secretariat of the UN Permanent
Forum on Indigenous Issue (SPFII) and the Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights (OHCHR).
The goals of the Frontlines forum are to: - Draw international attention to the knowledge and experiences of indigenous
communities and peoples living in small islands, the Arctic and other vulnerable environments; - Seek community-level
observations on climate change impacts, as well as local efforts to cope with and adapt to these changes; - Provide an
opportunity for communities to voice their observations, experiences and concerns, and to share and exchange them with
other communities; - Build up a global database of local observations, experiences, practices and coping strategies; -
Support community-based research and educational activities related to climate change; - Heighten the profile and impact
of indigenous peoples and their knowledge in international climate change debates.
Following the forum's launch on 12 June 2008 on the theme of Early Impacts of climate change, 3 cycles of discussions
have been received from contributors. This first debate can be accessed at www.climatefrontlines.org. A new forum theme
on CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION will be launched on 24 September.
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