43rd issue of Forest Cover, the newsletter of the Global Forest Coalition
1 July 2013
In this new issue of the Global Forest Coalition’s newsletter in intergovernmental forest-related policy processes: the editorial addresses the main happenings during the last United Nations Forum on Forests were market based approaches gained new ground; followed by an article that gives an overview of what the last climate negotiations in Bonn were about providing a critical view on what seems to be coming next; the next article deals with the ‘Cilmate Space’, an important space given to civil society, indigenous peoples and other organizations who have been actively involved in climate change issues during the last World Social Forum held in Tunis. Former Ambassador of Bolivia to the UN, Pablo Solón, makes a reflection on what this space meant for the different struggles occuring in our days. The following report written by a Guatemalan activist, sums up what the post2015 and Sustainable Development Goals processes emerging from Rio+20 have meant for civil society including a deep analysis on why the way these processes are currently proposed are not likely to give any of the expected results. The last article is based on the happenings during the last GE trees biotech Conference held in Asheville, North Carolina where GE trees proposals are increasingly meeting with public opposition.
How Communities are Overcoming Systemic Barriers to Climate Action Forest Cover 70 brings together powerful case studies and firsthand testimonies from GFC member groups and allies in Bangladesh, Bolivia, Chile, Morocco, Panama, and Zambia. This edition exposes...
The Global Forest Coalition (GFC) warmly invites you to a special webinar on 29 January 2026 to launch the latest issue of Forest Cover: From False Solutions to Transformative Change: Creating the Conditions for Real Solutions to Flourish. → Click here to register...
Belém, Brazil - In a betrayal of Indigenous Peoples, climate justice movements and civil society, COP30 has been a profound failure. Instead of bold commitments to phase out fossil fuels and protect Indigenous Peoples, ecosystems and biodiversity, governments doubled...