Strengthening Community Management of Biodiversity and Food Systems in Ecuador’s Andean Highlands

Image credit: Courtesy of Groundswell International

Strengthening Community Management of Biodiversity and Food Systems in Ecuador’s Andean Highlands

Organization
Bioregion Andean Mountain Forests & Valleys (NT11)
Category Regenerative Agriculture

Our project categories represent one of three core solutions pathways to solving climate change. Energy Transition focuses on renewable energy access and energy efficiency. Nature Conservation includes wildlife habitat protection and ecosystem restoration, as well as Indigenous land rights. Regenerative Agriculture supports farmers, ranchers, and community agriculture.

Realm Southern America

The Project Marketplace is organized by the major terrestrial realms divided into 14 biogeographical regions – N. America, Subarctic America, C. America, S. America, Afrotropics, Indomalaya, Australasia, Oceania, Antarctica, and the Palearctic realm, which coincides with Eurasia and is divided into Subarctic, Western, Central, Eastern, and Southern regions.

Status active

Seed indicates an early stage project that needs some level of support to develop into a larger funding proposal. Active indicates any project that needs core programmatic funding. Urgent indicates a short-term project initiated in response to a natural disaster or other impending risk.

Funding Level $

A single $ indicates a small project requiring $50,000 or less.

Timeframe 12 Months
Partner Groundswell International

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One Earth’s Project Marketplace funds on-the-ground climate solutions that are key to solving the climate crisis through three pillars of collective action — renewable energy, nature conservation, and regenerative agriculture.

For over ten years, Groundswell International has been collaborating with Indigenous and mestizo communities in the Central and Northern Andean Highlands of Ecuador to address the accelerating erosion of their culture and well-being as a consequence of modernization. Traditional chakras (farms) and food systems have been displaced through dependence on industrial technologies and foreign investing and trading. This has resulted in negative effects on shared natural resources, the loss of control over seeds and biological resources, and damage to local economies, health, and human relationships.

The communities in this region are mainly Indigenous mixed with a mestizo population. All the highland communities are located in fragile and degraded mountain ecosystems where climate change is altering rainfall patterns and groundwater availability, increasing the challenges for small-scale production. Additionally, most of the men in these communities migrate to other work zones, forcing women to take on more and more responsibilities in household management, agricultural production, community organization, and leadership. Collaborative programs between EkoRural (a local NGO partner in Ecuador) and Groundswell International are focused primarily on addressing the needs of this vulnerable population and its children.

Local seed fair in Cotopaxi. Image credit: Courtesy of Groundswell International

This program will work with at least nine communities and 250 families on the following outcomes:

  • Increased local knowledge, with an emphasis on women’s leadership and agency for innovation and management of soil, community seed banks, and biodiversity at farm and community levels
  • Strengthened autonomy, capacity, and resilience of communities
  • Strengthened participation of community leaders, drawing on their experience of effective strategies, to influence ongoing public policy debates about agrobiodiversity, seeds, and the promotion of agroecology
  • Exchange of strategies and synthesis and documentation of results across Groundswell’s network of partners in ten countries to strengthen our collective impact locally and globally

The agroecological transition process in this region has led not only to the search for community-level socio-technical innovations but has also fostered efforts to extend urban-rural relations. Urban populations stand to benefit from increased access to sustainably farmed, local produce that can enhance their nutritional outcomes just as much as it benefits the populations growing these crops. On a broader scale, securing funding for this project would allow EkoRural and Groundswell to add to the growing body of evidence demonstrating the positive impact of agroecology.

Women threshing quinoa grains. Image credit: Courtesy of Groundswell International

Groundswell International’s participatory analysis with highland communities has demonstrated that strengthening household and community capacities to manage agrobiodiversity is a catalyzing entry point that enables families to address their concerns regarding loss of culture and environmental degradation. The process generates inspiration and capacities to further unlock the potential of biological, local, and cultural resources for improved productivity, income, and well-being. With the right support, the downward spiral can be replaced with a positive cycle of social change based on trust and community-building.

Throughout Chimborazo and Cotopaxi, traditional culture is being displaced through dependence on externally based knowledge, distancing of markets, and the intermediation of relationships through financial institutions. This strengthens predominantly Indigenous communities by enhancing their traditional farming methods and allowing them to retake control of common-pool natural resources and local economies. To achieve this, support is given to community organizations to lead initiatives and make their own decisions.

Through community action-learning processes with farmers focused on ‘learning by doing’ and the diálogo de saberes (dialogue of wisdoms), Groundswell international assists them in efforts to enhance on-farm biodiversity conservation and preserve Indigenous knowledge.

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Your contribution will help ensure the long term success of this important project. Gifts can be made as a tribute to a friend or family member and are tax-deductible for U.S. residents. Please contact us!

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