Photo: Nick Lunch l Creating the Ulu Papar biocultural community protocol 145 Community researchers trained in participatory video. The biocultural community protocol To deal with these problems and ensure the recognition of Ulu Papar as an important site for the protection and promotion of biocultural heritage in Sabah, the community researchers complemented the ongoing broad range of participatory advocacy activities by launching a process to develop the Ulu Papar BCP in 2010 with the support of various partners. In this context, it was the participatory research and advocacy processes that provided community researchers with the techniques and experiences to draw on, in the process of developing the protocol. The Ulu Papar BCP is a document describing the community, its members’ way of life and culture, and the activities that sustain their daily lives, such as agriculture, hunting and harvesting forest and river resources. It elucidates the rights, responsibilities, interests and roles of the community in overcoming the challenges they face as well as their unique management and conservation approaches that are based on their adat (customary laws) and culture. The protocol represents the product of consultations that have involved many community members in the process of thinking about and analysing their priorities as a united collective. In this way, it also embodies a framework guide to stimulate unity as they move to resolve the problems faced in each village. Most importantly, and moving beyond village-level problems, the protocol represents a clear articulation of the community’s aspirations in terms of future interactions with outside actors, including representatives of government agencies. In this sense, the protocol is a fundamental tool in any process where outside parties intend to obtain the community’s free, prior informed consent (FPIC), and therefore represents the first step in a larger mechanism for engagement with outside actors, within the community, and with future generations. The process to develop the Ulu Papar protocol was conducted through a series of workshops, trainings and discussions with community members and relevant parties

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