23 SECTION III USING THE TOOLKIT This Toolkit is intended to support Indigenous peoples and local communities to secure their rights and responsibilities and strengthen customary ways of life and stewardship of their territories and areas. It is directed primarily towards facilitators from the communities themselves or from supporting organizations with whom they have long-standing and positive relationships. Even if the idea of a biocultural community protocol is introduced by an external actor, the Toolkit should be used by the community. Section III highlights key considerations to explore before beginning the process of documenting, developing, and using a biocultural community protocol. It includes guidance on understanding how the community defines itself, cultural and internal dynamics, local institutions, and participation and representation. It also provides suggestions of how to facilitate the protocol process, including understanding your role as a facilitator, managing expectations and information, and supporting community catalysts. Finally, it explores the notion of free, prior and informed consent. These are not hard rules or step-by-step requirements, but could be considered good practice guidelines to adapt to the local context and your skills as a facilitator. They can be explored in a number of different ways, including through workshops, open-ended discussions with certain groups, and focused meetings with community leaders. A. UNDERSTANDING THE COMMUNITY A1. Contextualizing ‘Community’ A discussion about the community could begin with Traditional health practitioners in Mpumalanga, the questions of who defines it and how it is defined. South Africa, established an association through Outsiders commonly use the term ‘community’ to which they advocate for greater recognition of refer to people living in a geographically defined their collective medicinal knowledge. They are space without much consideration of what joins from two different ethnic and linguistic groups them together or what may separate them. People that normally do not consider themselves part generally know the boundaries of their own of the same ‘community’. community and where another one begins. This understanding of boundaries is governed by Box 7: Changing notions of 'community' relations between groups that are often historically

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