l Editorial 5 Guest editors Our guest editors for this issue are Krystyna Swiderska (IIED), Kanchi Kohli (Kalpavriksh, India and Campaign for Conservation and Community Control over Biodiversity), Harry Jonas and Holly Shrumm (Natural Justice), Wim Hiemstra (ETC COMPAS, The Netherlands) and María Julia Oliva (Union for Ethical Biotrade). Krystyna Swiderska has been a researcher at IIED for 17 years. During this time, she has worked mainly on biodiversity and livelihoods issues, in particular on the protection of traditional knowledge and access to genetic resources and benefitsharing. Between 2005 and 2009, she coordinated participatory action-research with indigenous and local communities on Protecting Community Rights over Traditional Knowledge: Implications of Customary Laws and Practices. This project was conducted with partners in Peru, Panama, India, China and Kenya and developed a range of tools, including community protocols. It developed the concept of ‘collective biocultural heritage’, building on research with Quechua communities, as the conceptual framework for action-research. Krystyna set up the biocultural heritage website www.bioculturalheritage.org to share the results of the project. She has just started coordinating a major new project on the role of biocultural systems in adaptation to climate change and food security. Krystyna is also co-Director of the International Society for Ethnobiology’s Global Coalition for Biocultural Diversity. Kanchi Kohli has been involved in environment and forest governance-related issues for close to 15 years. She has worked with, amongst others, Kalpavriksh Environmental Action Group and the Campaign for Conservation and Community Control over Biodiversity, India, carrying out actionresearch campaigns and advocacy outputs related to environment, biodiversity and agriculture and its interface with industry, 1 See: www.ashoka.org/fellows infrastructure and energy in India. Her recent work explores the commodification of nature and its implications for conservation and environmental governance. Communication is a key component of Kanchi's work. She writes regularly in several national-level newspapers and magazines, as well as for websites. Since 2004, she has co-coordinated an information dissemination service for forest and wildlife cases in the Supreme Court of India. Kanchi has also been campaign and research adviser to national-level networks and organisations related to coal and climate, genetic engineering and conservation of agrobiodiversity, especially millets. She has also been involved in putting together publications on regulatory regimes and decision-making processes around environment, forests and biodiversityrelated policy frameworks. Harry Jonas is a lawyer and co-founder of Natural Justice: Lawyers for Communities and the Environment and an Ashoka Fellow.1 Holly Shrumm also works for Natural Justice and has a background in anthropology, zoology and communitybased natural resource management. Natural Justice works to uphold the principle that people should be involved in decisions that affect them. Natural Justice uses its understanding of international and domestic legal frameworks to help indigenous peoples and local communities to assert their rights to govern their lands, natural resources and traditional knowledge. Natural Justice and its partners are actively contributing to the development of biocultural community protocols as a widely accessible means by which communities can articulate their stewardship ethics, assert their rights and affirm their responsibilities. Based in Sabah, Malaysia, Harry and Holly are co-coordinating the Asia Regional Initiative on Biocultural Community Protocols together with COMPAS, the LIFE Network, UNU-IAS and community partners in Pakistan, India

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