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Grants for Reporting on Marine Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas in Canada

Asia New Zealand Foundation's Media Travel Grants in New Zealand

Deadline: 30 April 2020

The Institute for Journalism & Natural Resources invites proposals from journalists or news outlets for reporting projects that cover Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas (IPCAs) in Canada, with a particular focus on marine areas.

The Institute for Journalism & Natural Resources is looking for ambitious journalistic projects that shed light on this emerging future of conservation, the complicated politics of IPCAs, and how Indigenous communities are leading the way on landscape-level protection.

In 2010, countries from across the globe gathered in Japan at the Convention for Biological Diversity and adopted a strategic plan to protect biodiversity. Comprised of 20 discrete targets (known as the Aichi Targets), this plan set guidelines for the 194 signatories, encouraged each country to set their own specific targets, and make strides toward achieving these goals by 2020.

As one of the signatories, Canada prioritized landscape-level protection. Canada Target 1 outlines: “By 2020, at least 17% of terrestrial areas and inland water, and 10% of coastal and marine areas, are conserved through networks of protected areas and other effective area-based conservation measures.” Given the inherent challenges of protection at this scale, it soon became clear that previous approaches alone may not be sufficient. Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas, a relatively new inter-governmental approach to conservation that was first initiated in Indigenous communities, show promise for providing an essential pathway to achieving these targets.

Funding Information

Criteria

Proposal Requirements

For more information, visit http://www.ijnr.org/ipca

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