In less than 11 months, a new partnership between Peru’s Indigenous rights organization AIDESEP and the Rainforest Foundation U.S. helped secure 37 land titles for Amazon communities — the fastest such process in the country’s history. The titles, granted between June 2023 C.E. and May 2024 C.E., represent a landmark shift not just in land rights, but in how Indigenous communities protect their forests, their cultures, and their futures.
At a glance
- Indigenous land titles: 37 titles were secured across the Peruvian Amazon in just 11 months, a record pace made possible by a new low-cost, technology-driven model developed by AIDESEP and Rainforest Foundation U.S.
- Deforestation reduction: Titled Indigenous lands in Peru experience a 66% decrease in deforestation compared to untitled territories, making legal ownership one of the most effective climate tools available.
- Territorial consolidation: Unlike older fragmented titling approaches, the new methodology creates unified, contiguous territories — more aligned with Indigenous land worldviews and harder for illegal actors to penetrate.
A process that once took years now takes months
For decades, securing land titles in Peru meant navigating a slow, dangerous bureaucracy. More than 30 Indigenous leaders have been murdered over the past two decades while fighting for recognition of their ancestral lands. The process often stretched on for years, relying on outside intermediaries and offering little control to the communities themselves.
The new model, piloted since 2022 C.E., rewrites that dynamic. AIDESEP — the Interethnic Association for the Development of the Peruvian Rainforest, which has been organizing since the 1980s — forged a formal agreement with the regional government of Loreto. Under the deal, the government committed to hiring soil analysts, lawyers, and Geographic Information System (GIS) specialists. AIDESEP and Rainforest Foundation U.S. then provided satellite technology and geospatial mapping tools directly to Indigenous forest monitors on the ground.
The result: a process that previously took years to produce results now delivers them in under a year.
Technology in Indigenous hands
What makes this approach distinctive is where the power sits. Rather than routing technology and expertise through outside organizations, the model places mapping tools, satellite imagery, and technical training directly with the Indigenous communities doing the work. That shift matters enormously — both practically and symbolically.
Wendy Pineda, General Project Manager of Rainforest Foundation U.S. in Peru, specializes in GIS, satellite remote sensing, and participatory mapping. Her team’s role was to support, not lead — a deliberate design choice that strengthens communities’ long-term capacity to defend their own territories rather than creating ongoing dependency on outside actors.
Miguel Guimaraes Vasquez, vice president of AIDESEP and a Shipibo-Konibo environmental human rights defender from the native community Flor de Ucayali, has described the vision simply: implement a low-cost, high-impact model that Indigenous peoples themselves control.
Why land titles are a climate strategy
The case for Indigenous land titling as a climate intervention is now well-supported by research. A 2020 C.E. study published in Nature Sustainability found that formally recognized Indigenous territories in the Amazon store significantly more carbon and lose far less forest than comparable unprotected areas. The 66% deforestation reduction figure cited by AIDESEP is consistent with broader evidence that legal land rights are among the most cost-effective forest protection tools available.
Titled land allows communities to hold illegal loggers and land-grabbers legally accountable. It also creates buffer zones that protect adjacent, untitled Indigenous territories from encroachment — a cascading effect that extends protection well beyond the titled parcels themselves.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has recognized Indigenous land stewardship as a critical component of land-based climate mitigation. Expanding formal land rights across the Amazon, advocates argue, is one of the fastest paths to slowing deforestation at scale.
A model built to travel
AIDESEP and Rainforest Foundation U.S. believe the methodology can be replicated across the Amazon and potentially in other forest regions worldwide. The key ingredients — a government agreement, a trained local workforce, and community-held technology — are transferable. The relatively low cost per title compared to traditional processes makes replication financially realistic even for under-resourced governments and organizations.
The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, adopted in 2007 C.E., affirms Indigenous communities’ right to own, use, and control their lands and resources. Formal titling is one of the most concrete ways that declaration translates into protection on the ground. Still, significant gaps remain: tens of millions of hectares of Indigenous-occupied land across the Amazon lack formal recognition, and the political will to close that gap varies widely across governments. The record set in Peru between 2023 C.E. and 2024 C.E. is a proof of concept, not a finished solution.
Organizations like LandMark, a global platform tracking Indigenous and community land rights, estimate that Indigenous peoples manage roughly 22% of the world’s land surface but hold legal title to only a fraction of it. Closing that gap, the evidence increasingly suggests, would be good for forests, for the climate, and for the communities who have protected these ecosystems for generations.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Mongabay
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights win at COP30 secures 160 million hectares
- U.K. cancer death rates fall to their lowest level on record
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Peru
About this article
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