9 The Toolkit consists of four parts: Part I is intended to help community facilitators understand and effectively use the Toolkit. It introduces the Toolkit and what biocultural community protocols are and how they are being used around the world. It provides guidance on using the Toolkit, including considerations of understanding the community and the role of the facilitator. It also provides an overview of a number of key methods and tools to choose and adapt as appropriate in each local context. Part II provides guidance on documenting and developing a biocultural community protocol. It references key methods and tools from Part I and suggests guiding questions for the appropriate documentation of aspects of the community’s ways of life, consolidation of a protocol, and development of strategies to put the protocol into practice. Part III provides guidance on using a biocultural community protocol. It suggests a number of ways to engage with external actors, raise awareness with communities and the broader public, engage in key decision-making processes, negotiate with external actors, and prevent and resolve conflict. Part IV provides guidance on reflecting on processes and changes to date, reporting back to the community and to external actors, and revisiting and revising the protocol and associated strategies and plans. The Toolkit is intended for use in conjunction with the dedicated website www.community-protocols.org. The website contains a wide range of supplementary multimedia resources that will be added and updated over time, including: Short films, photo stories, and slideshows; Articles, books, magazines, and journals; Information about key methods and tools relating to endogenous development, participatory documentation and communication, legal empowerment, social mobilization, advocacy, and monitoring and evaluation; Legal resources such as e-learning modules on key legal frameworks that relate to Indigenous peoples, local communities, and their territories and areas; Networking opportunities; and Links to existing community protocols from Africa, Asia-Pacific, and the Americas. Overall, the Toolkit aims to strike a balance between underscoring important principles and providing practical guidance, retaining some degree of structure without being overly prescriptive. It is intended to empower communities to make informed decisions about participatory and legal empowerment methods and tools that can help secure their rights and responsibilities and strengthen customary ways of life and stewardship of their territories and areas. B. BACKGROUND TO THE TOOLKIT This is the first edition of the Biocultural Community Protocols Toolkit, developed as part of the Regional Initiatives on Biocultural Community Protocols.2 Protocols are being developed by a number of Indigenous peoples and local and mobile communities and their supporting organizations around the world (see Table 1). 2 For more information on the African and Asian Initiatives on Biocultural Community Protocols, see: http://naturaljustice.org/our-work/regional-initiatives/biocultural-community-protocol.

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