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Indigenous rights, knowledge, and participation in the global plastics treaty

Cambridge Prisms Plastics 2025 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Lynn K. Jacobs

Summary

This paper argues that Indigenous Peoples are disproportionately harmed at every stage of the plastic lifecycle and face structural barriers to participation in UN plastics treaty negotiations, calling for binding commitments to Indigenous rights, traditional knowledge inclusion, and full and effective participation in global plastic governance.

Abstract Indigenous Peoples are disproportionately impacted at every stage of the plastic lifecycle, from the extraction of the fossil fuel feedstock and plastic production, to the widespread dispersal of maco-, micro- and nanoplastics in the natural environment. They face many barriers to their participation in UN processes and must constantly push for their rights to be upheld and for their full and effective participation to be secured. This constant basic struggle for Indigenous rights and participation can consume all the energy and efforts of Indigenous delegates in UN processes at the expense of all the other important knowledge and messages they carry from their communities and nations to address the very real and serious harms that have been inflicted on their territories and all the life within it. Negotiators at INC-5.2 have a great responsibility to address this serious global crisis, while being reminded that Indigenous Peoples, who are on the frontlines of the plastic pollution crisis, must be equal participants as experts of their own knowledge and science and participate in the process as rightsholders in all decision-making that affects them.

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