Indigenous Contestations of Carbon Markets, Carbon Colonialism, and Power Dynamics in International Climate Negotiations
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
This paper examines the intersection of global climate governance, carbon markets, and Indigenous Peoples' rights under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. It critically analyses how Indigenous Peoples have contested the Article 6 market mechanisms of the Paris Agreement at COP25 and COP26 by highlighting their role in perpetuating "carbon colonialism," thereby revealing deeper power dynamics in global climate governance. Utilising a Political Ecology framework, the study explores these power dynamics at play during the climate negotiations, focusing on the instrumental, structural, and discursive forms of power that enable or limit Indigenous participation. Through a qualitative case study approach, the research reveals that while Indigenous Peoples have successfully used discursive strategies to challenge market-based solutions, their influence remains limited due to entrenched structural and instrumental power imbalances within the UNFCCC process. The study highlights the need for equitable policies that integrate human rights safeguards and prioritise Indigenous-led, non-market-based approaches to ecological restoration.