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Supporting struggles for social justice in the forests
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    • Issues
      • Resistance
        • Struggles for the Forests
        • Struggles Against Tree Monocultures
        • Seeds of Hope
        • Women in Resistance
        • Indigenous Peoples' Struggles
      • Deforestation: Direct Causes
        • Agribusiness
        • Industrial Logging
        • Mega Dams and Other Infrastructure
        • Large-Scale Mining
        • Large-Scale Tree Plantations
        • Fossil Fuels
      • Deforestation: Underlying Causes
        • FAO Forest Definition
        • Consumption
        • The Green Economy
        • Protected Areas
        • Legal Land Theft
      • False Solutions
        • Carbon offsetting and REDD
        • Biodiversity Offsetting
        • Pricing Nature
        • Certification Schemes
        • Bioeconomy
      • Tree Plantations
        • Pulp and Paper
        • Timber
        • Palm Oil
        • Women and Tree Monocultures
        • Rubber
        • Carbon Storage
        • Biomass
        • GE-Trees
        • FSC and RSPO
      • Global Policies and Actors
        • International Forest Policies
        • The World Bank and Other Financial Institutions
        • Conservationist NGOs
        • The Corporate Sector
    • Bulletin
      • Current Issue
      • Previous Bulletins
      • Subscribe
    • Materials
      • Publications
      • Multimedia
      • Declarations
    • About WRM
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Supporting struggles for social justice in the forests
  1. Home
  2. Issues
  3. Global Policies and Actors
  4. International Forest Policies

International Forest Policies

Tropical forests have been on the United Nations’ agenda since the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Unfortunately, corporate interests have co-opted these processes and initiatives, and they now promote mostly market-based ideas—such as the 'green' economy or green’ capitalism—which are false solutions.

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Image
Tropical Forests Forever Facility
Other information 23 April 2025

“Worst conservation fund ever”

Image
Other information 21 March 2016

The new legal framework on biodiversity and the commodification of nature in Brazil

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Other information 13 November 2013

REDD+ and the Underlying Causes of Deforestation and forest Degradation

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WRM default image
Other information 27 February 2010

Brazil: Once again opposing Plantar’s CDM project

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Other information 18 March 2002

Status of Implementation of Forest-Related Clauses in the CBD: An Independent Review & Recommendations for Action

Contact

World Rainforest Movement
Av Bolivia 1962 BIS
CP 11500 – Montevideo, Uruguay
Tel / Fax: +598 2605 6943
Email: wrm@wrm.org.uy

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