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Call for Inputs for the WG Peasants Report on Peasant Territories on Land and Sea

Editor’s note:

The United Nations Working Group on UNDROP has opened a call for inputs inviting civil society, states, and multilateral institutions to directly contribute to its next report on Peasant Territorialities of Sea and Land, which will be delivered to the UN General Assembly in the fall of 2026.

This is a key opportunity for rural movements and organisations to share their lived realities and struggles related to access to, control over, and management of land. More than a concrete means of officially documenting the cross-cutting issues faced by rural peoples concerning their territorialities, this call for inputs allows rural peoples to have their voices heard in an official UN publication, which can later be used for advocacy and informative purposes vis-à-vis states and relevant institutions.

We encourage the various movements and organisations representing UNDROP’s rights holders to submit their contribution (max. 1000 words) to this call by 19 February 2026. For more information, please read the full call below.

Background

The Working Group on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas, established by Human Rights Council resolution 54/9, is preparing its fourth thematic report, addressing Peasant Territories of Sea and Land. This report analyses how the impairment of rights based on land, water, and forests affects the dignity, stability, and livelihoods of peasants and rural workers.

Access to land, water, forests, and marine territories is central to the survival, identity, and autonomy of rural populations. These groups, including peasants, indigenous peoples, pastoralists, nomads, migrant communities, rural workers, and artisanal fishers, are rights-holders recognized by the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas (UNDROP).

However, “peasant territorialities,” defined as socio-ecological and cultural spaces where lifestyles, sustainable production, and collective governance intersect, face increasing pressure. Pressure arising from resource concentration, fragmentation, privatization, and extraction not only threaten livelihoods and stability but also exacerbate rural conflicts and forced displacement, often leading to systemic human rights violations.

This report recognizes that peasant territories are not merely resource “containers,” but spaces of material and symbolic life where the rights to food, water, a healthy environment, participation, and self-determination converge. The report will consider international frameworks such as UNDROP, the Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure, the work of Treaty Bodies, as well as indigenous and environmental rights standards, to address violations of UNDROP stakeholder rights.

There is a growing trend toward rural ownership concentration and the corporate capture of natural resources. The expansion of the “blue economy” can, without adequate safeguards, excludes traditional fishing communities. “Green grabbing” (appropriation disguised as conservation) and “blue grabbing” (appropriation of coastal spaces for tourism or energy projects), alongside armed conflict and structural violence, often lead to dispossession.

Finally, the Report will identify good practices, structural challenges, and concrete recommendations to protect rural and coastal peasant territories.

The Working Group invites governments, peasants and other people working in rural areas, international and regional organizations, national human rights institutions, civil society, academics, companies and any other interested individuals and organizations to provide written inputs.

Key questions and types of input/comments sought
  1. How is the concept of “peasant territory” understood in your local or regional context?
  2. What legal, political, cultural or customary instruments exist in your country or region that recognize or protect peasant territories (land, water, forests, sea)?
  3. How does Article 17 of the UNDROP relate to the processes of access to land and nature in their local realities?

    Concentration and Access to Resources
  4. What is causing the concentration of rural property in your region? Is there data available on fragmentation or grabbing?
  5. What impact does water privatization or industrial forest exploitation have on peasant communities?
  6. How does the maritime economy affect fishing and coastal communities? Are there cases of dispossession or exclusion?
  7. How do nature conservation agendas intersect with peasant lands and agrarian reform processes?

    Challenges and good practices
  8. What are the main obstacles faced by peasant, ethnic or fishing communities in accessing, controlling and managing their territories?
  9. What strategies, laws, movements or initiatives have been successful in defending or recovering territories? (Examples: agrarian reforms, collective titling, strategic litigation, community resistance).
  10. How are the phenomena of “Green Grabbing” or “Blue Grabbing” being dealt with in context?
  11. What role do peasant and young women play in the defense and management of territories? Are there good practices of empowerment and participation?
  12. How do armed conflicts or political violence affect territorial dispossession? Are there examples of post-conflict recovery?

    Recommendations
  13. What concrete actions should States, international organizations (UN, FAO, UNDP), civil society organizations and communities themselves take to protect and strengthen peasant territorialities?
  14. What justice, public policy or financing mechanisms are urgent to reverse the concentration and guarantee equitable access to resources?
How inputs will be used?

Please send your submission via email to [email protected] by 19 February 2026, with the subject:Input for UNGA Report on Territory.

Contributions must be sent in WORD/PDF format, in English, French, or Spanish, with a maximum of 1,000 words. Please indicate your details (name, government/ institution/ organization, contact details) for any follow up queries.

Additional supporting materials, such as reports, academic studies, and other background materials may be linked in the body of the submission or annexed to the submission.

Unless otherwise specified by those making a submission, submissions will be made public on the Working Group’s website.

Please feel free to circulate this call for inputs widely in your networks.

Next Steps


Input/comments may be sent by e-mail. They must be received by 19 February 2026 23:00 (Geneva time).

Email address: [email protected]

Email subject line: Input for UNGA Report on Territories

Word/Page limit:
1000 words

Accepted file formats:
Word, PDF

Accepted Languages:
English, French, Spanish

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