Semi-finalist
2024 Global Learning Challenge

Indigneous-led GeoStory Camps

Team Leader
Bianca Inês Pedro
Solution Overview & Team Lead Details
Our Organization
People's Planet Project
What is the name of your solution?
Indigneous-led GeoStory Camps
Provide a one-line summary of your solution.
Developing collective impact Indigenous-led Green Belts for Participatory Litigation Pathways to Climate Justice, using film and GeoSpatial Maps.
In what city, town, or region is your solution team headquartered?
Amsterdam, Netherlands
In what country is your solution team headquartered?
  • Portugal
What type of organization is your solution team?
  • Nonprofit
Film your elevator pitch.
What specific problem are you solving?

At the current rate of deforestation, by 2030, only 10% of the world's rainforests will remain, posing a critical threat to biodiversity and the environment. Deforestation, particularly in biodiversity hotspots like the rainforests of Sumatra, is exacerbating this crisis. Indigenous communities are disproportionately impacted. These communities have historically served as stewards of biodiversity but are now facing displacement and loss of land rights due to encroachment by extractive industries like palm oil, and mining. These same frontline Indigenous communities have proven to be the most effective environmental stewards, with deforestation up to 50% lower in our territories, especially with full legal rights over our land. However, we are often sidelined in solutions around climate action and forest preservation.

We currently work with 8 Indigenous communities over 5 counrties within the world's most at-risk biodiversity hotspots - including the coral triangle, Amazon Basin, and Leuser ecosystem. Below is just one of 8 examples of the problem we are aiming to solve, in collaboration with Indigenous communities. Just as the problem is scalable and replicated across the world, so can our co-designed solution be.

Since first collaborating with the Orang Rimba in 2022, we have continued evidence that infrastructure projects and palm oil monoculture continue to cause displacement and threats to both livelihood and survival for the Orang Rimba living in the Jambi region of Sumatra, Indonesia. Currently, among ~3,000 community members, there are subgroups who are being displaced, and others facing imminent threat of displacement, due to company encroachment on their land. Encroaching villagers often harass, exclude, and are violent towards them.

Companies have, without following any consent (FPIC) processes, destroyed key cultural and subsistence areas. The National Park Authority governs their land, within the externally defined confines of the Bukit Duabelas National Park. They have not included the Orang Rimba in discussion around the use of land or the changing of the boundaries of the protected areas in which the Orang Rimba live. For example, the community has been evicted from the area with birthing trees destroyed that are key to the pregnancy and birthing customs of this community. There have also been cases of violence against the Orang Rimba from the nearby villages.

The Orang Rimba had survived within the confines of the ever diminishing Bukit Duabelas National park, however, they are now forced to move or flee, therefore are internally displaced peoples. With no access to their traditional areas of subsistence and custom, they continue to lose both their conservation role and agency to be custodians of the Bukit Duabelas National Park.

The Orang Rimba currently have no agency in litigation or advocacy with the governing National Park Authority, which hosts them. In the last 24 months, relationships have been strained between this authority and encroaching villagers because the Orang Rimba’s land continues to be sold and destroyed without consent or notice, even within the previously existing protected boundaries. 

What is your solution?

People’s Planet Project is an Indigenous-led, non-profit organisation and global movement which aims to collaborate for a world where Indigenous peoples have the agency to stop environmental destruction from industries encroaching on their land and seas; a world where communities are able to live undisturbed on their own territories.

In direct collaboration with Indigenous communities worldwide, People’s Planet Project carries out GeoStory Camps – a long-term collective impact project through which Indigenous communities engage in intensive film and geospatial mapping skills workshops, and are equipped to use these tools to create  evidence-based stories and collect data in realtime for use in advocacy campaigns and legal cases to protect the world’s forests.

We work in high-impact biodiversity hotspots, including the Amazon, Leuser ecosystem, and coral triangle. Our intersectional approach, targeting the world's most at-risk locations, bring together Indigenous communities' intimate knowledge of land and sea with video and geospatial data technologies to be combined as a powerful medium to monitor and expose environmental crimes in real-time.

Our Indigenous-led programme combines best-practice collective impact, community organising, and participatory film and mapping for legal change.

The evidence-based approach addresses this holistically through the use of film and mapping as documentation and evidence-gathering methods, and lead to change via the connection to legal pathways, advocacy within national institutions, and continuous legal and collective impact support built through Indigenous-led working groups.

A collective impact network and interdisciplinary approach that is structured through the Indigenous-led working group brings together local GIS analysts, filmmakers, environmental lawyers, local stakeholders, CSO’s, Indigenous representatives working on an equal footing towards solutions around human rights and climate justice.

Until now, 53 community members have received training: 30 in filmmaking and 23 in geospatial mapping. Participants have begun collecting foundational data and creating stories about their land and its biodiversity. For the next 3 years, trained Indigenous activists from these communities will create film and mapping content backed by legal context, with the support of partner environmental lawyers that People’s Planet Project engages as part of the collective impact working group.

Trained communities are equipped to be active agents in court cases to protect their rights using data-backed evidence. With the current projects in place, People’s Planet Project aims to protect up to 5,242,000 hectares of Indigenous forest and territory, and all the biodiversity within it, in the coming 4 years

Ultimately, the project is designed to be scaled up but maintain contextual relevance across different locations, with other Indigenous tribes utilising and finding success with a similar innovative combination of techniques, and importantly being central active agents in the process. This long-term project equips communities to protect their environmental, land, and cultural rights, achieving self-determination, preserving biodiversity while fostering independent advocacy and collaboration from the frontlines.

Who does your solution serve, and in what ways will the solution impact their lives?

Improving quality of life and relationships with ‘host’ communities: Ability to articulate, negotiate, and link experiences to local and national rights will assist the communities that we collaborate with to protect their way of life by engaging in collective governance with relevant national authorities and bargaining power to ensure equity in relationships with encroaching industries.

This project provides Indigenous (often remote) communities with the skills and tools needed to advocate for their rights and protect their ancestral land. By engaging being active agents in participatory litigation and developing evidence-based storytelling, using film and GIS mapping technologies, participants can actively document human rights infringements and environmental damage, enabling tangible evidence to advocate for their rights and resist further displacement.

Positive Impact on Natural Environment: By confirming the rights of the Indigenous communities we work with, as acknowledged custodians of the area in which they have been impacted or displaced, the biodiversity and ecological integrity will be secured. In Sumatra, for example, this looks like 60,500 hectares of the Bukit Duabelas forest will be safeguarded.

With increased agency, within the ‘host’ authorities, these communities can manage the land sustainably and advocate for environmental protection: Successful negotiations with the ‘host’ authorities will allow for preservation of vital ecosystems and help mitigate deforestation, a critical issue in biodiversity hotspots.

Fostering Positive Engagement and Active Agency in Climate Justice: The co-designed GeoStory Camp and technology that is left with the communities fosters positive engagement between the Indigenous communities; relevant local experts; and the relevant national institutions. By involving participants in decision-making, capacity is built to advocate for rights, and supporting the professionalisation of their representative organisations, the project promotes inclusivity, empowerment, and mutual respect between impacted or displaced groups and their 'hosts' - which are either national authorities or encroaching industries, depending on the location. The evidence-based films and maps produced will support advocacy and litigation to secure and maintain the communities' deep connection to their ancestral land, and continue being active custodians. This project empower Indigenous representatives to mobilise using combined technologies and Indigenous knowledge to effectively practise collective governance, improving their livelihoods while protecting the biodiversity hotspot that they depend on for survival.

How are you and your team well-positioned to deliver this solution?

Our diverse team of filmmakers, community organising experts, GIS analysts, Indigenous educators, and environmental litigators allows People’s Planet Project to be uniquely positioned to deliver this program effectively, having already established deep engagement with the Orang Rimba (Sumatra); Linge (Sumatra); Lovongai (Papua New Guinea); Kisedje (Brazil); Yudja (Brazil); Yanomami (Brazil); Shipibo-Konibo (Peru) - and more - communities through extensive consultation processes and foundational workshops.

We have laid the groundwork for the next stage of the GeoStory Camp program over 4 years, focusing on equipping community members with essential technological skills in film and GIS mapping, which are integral to the program's success. This early involvement of the community in the co-design process has allowed for meaningful input into the program's content and goals, ensuring alignment with the community's needs and priorities. This next stage is ready for impact: Communities are linked with environmental lawyers and are now ready to combine the skills learnt with a litigation pathway.

Our program framework incorporates a strong focus on Gender Equality and Women's Empowerment (GEWE) and Environmental Protection and Climate Change outcomes. We recognize the importance of encouraging female participation in the project and have already observed an increase in female engagement across previous workshops. Understanding the unique gender norms within Indigenous communities, we have devised strategies to include female voices and input in culturally sensitive ways, such as through interviews and participation in mapping processes. Our commitment to ongoing gender analysis, consultations, and monitoring ensures that female involvement remains a key focus throughout the project, promoting balanced gender perspectives in all activities.

Furthermore, our program directly contributes to Environmental Protection and Climate Change outcomes by empowering communities to protect their land and natural resources through legal and technical skills transfer. By enabling Indigenous-led environmental protection and sustainable resource management, we aim to influence laws and policies in favor of Indigenous rights, ensuring their territorial and land management rights are upheld with their participation at the core.

Recognizing Indigenous communities' role as custodians of nature and biodiversity, particularly in areas like Jambi, Indonesia, our program seeks to support and amplify their traditional stewardship practices, contributing to national and international climate and nature conservation goals.

Our team's expertise in community engagement, capacity building, and program implementation positions us well to deliver tangible outcomes for these 8 communities, and to scale up. Through ongoing collaboration and consultation, we are committed to empowering the community to advocate for their rights, protect their environment, and achieve sustainable development in line with their cultural values and aspirations.

Which dimension of the Challenge does your solution most closely address?
  • Provide the skills that people need to thrive in both their community and a complex world, including social-emotional competencies, problem-solving, and literacy around new technologies such as AI.
Which of the UN Sustainable Development Goals does your solution address?
  • 10. Reduced Inequalities
  • 13. Climate Action
  • 15. Life on Land
  • 16. Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions
What is your solution’s stage of development?
  • Growth
Please share details about why you selected the stage above.

People’s Planet Project’s key milestones are achieved through its GeoStory Camps initiative. The first and second phases of the GeoStory Camps have been implemented with representatives from the 12 tribal communities across Lovongai (Papua New Guinea) island, the Kīsêdjê and Yudjá communities in Brazil’s Amazon; the Orang Rimba and Linge communities in Indonesia; and the Shipibo community in the Peruvian Amazon. These foundational programs focused on building strong filmmaking and geospatial mapping skills, and enabled peacebuilding processes between previously warring tribes. 

53 community members have received training: 30 in filmmaking and 23 in geospatial mapping. Participants have begun collecting foundational data and creating stories about their land and its biodiversity. For the next 3 years, trained Indigenous activists from these communities will create film and mapping content backed by legal context, with the support of partner environmental lawyers that People’s Planet Project engages as part of the collective impact working group. To date, PPP has successfully supported the Linge community, custodians of the Leuser ecosystem in Sumatra, to fend off a planned gold mining project by acquiring the social forestry scheme through the evidence-based storytelling methodology, showing how film, geospatial mapping, and litigation can strengthen Indigenous legal redress and protect biodiversity and land.

People’s Planet Project values long-term partnerships, for example: The continued Kīsêdjê collaboration in Brazil, original participants from 3 years ago are still connected with the organization’s projects and have developed their own film production company.

Trained communities are equipped to begin court cases to protect their rights using data-backed evidence. With the current projects in place, People’s Planet Project aims to protect up to 5,242,000 hectares of Indigenous forest and territory, and all the biodiversity within it, in the coming 4 years.

Why are you applying to Solve?

People’s Planet Project is seeking support from MITs global network to enhance our GeoStory Camps with additional expertise and funding, particularly focusing on predictive GIS models and backend technological infrastructure for the next phase of the GeoStory Camps.

Our GeoStory Camps are not just about documenting delicate ecosystems; they're about empowering Indigenous communities to be active agents in protecting their territories. By collaborating directly with impacted communities, we aim to equip them with the tools and knowledge needed to safeguard vital carbon sink ecosystems. However, as we progress into the next phase of the GeoStory Camps, we recognize the need to deepen our expertise in predictive GIS models and backend technological infrastructure to bolster our efforts, and think that MITs network could bring an added element to our collective impact network that we have so far built across the 8 communities that we currently work with.

Our approach is rooted in the power of evidence-based storytelling, combining film and geospatial mapping data to empower trained Indigenous communities to use these tools effectively as evidence in legal cases and decision-making spaces. What sets our project apart is its co-design with Indigenous groups and its dual focus on both proative and reactive campaigning. We believe that having a partnership with MIT, and the expertise of a global network of change-makers will bolster our efforts, and deepen the ability for us to use technology as we envision: In collaboration and co-design with Indigenous knowledge holders.

As we move forward, we see the potential for predictive GIS models to play a crucial role in early detection of potential deforestation, empowering communities to take preventative action through local legal mechanisms. However, to implement these models effectively, we require additional expertise and resources in predictive GIS modeling and backend technological infrastructure.

By harnessing the power of predictive GIS models and enhancing our backend technological infrastructure, we can further strengthen the impact of our GeoStory Camps and empower Indigenous communities to secure their future. With the support of a global network, we can access the expertise and funding needed to take our project to the next level, safeguarding delicate ecosystems and advancing Indigenous rights.

In which of the following areas do you most need partners or support?
  • Financial (e.g. accounting practices, pitching to investors)
  • Human Capital (e.g. sourcing talent, board development)
  • Monitoring & Evaluation (e.g. collecting/using data, measuring impact)
Who is the Team Lead for your solution?
Bianca Inês Pedro
More About Your Solution
Your Team
Your Business Model & Funding
Solution Team:
Bianca Inês Pedro
Bianca Inês Pedro