A group of women from Sungai Berbari, a village in Riau, Indonesia, blockade a road that leads to a nearby oil palm plantation. They’re protesting the companies that operate the plantation because they failed to water the roads regularly, as promised, to prevent dust from kicking up as their haul trucks drive by. Dust in the air is a major cause of acute respiratory disease for the villagers.
The protest grabbed the companies’ attention for a day, but progress was short-lived. The companies watered the road for a few days, but no fines or penalties were issued and it was back to business-as-usual within a week.
This kind of scenario has become commonplace ever since the Indonesian government began granting concessions across Riau’s forests for agricultural operations without consulting with communities or enforcing the terms of agreements. To understand and effectively advocate for better land use policy, villagers like these women need tangible information about the forests around them.
Women bear the brunt of environmental damage
Poorly managed, large-scale agricultural operations make life difficult for the residents of Sungai Berbari.
Women often bear the brunt of the consequences. They are responsible for domestic duties, such as procuring clean water, childcare and managing household finances—the elements of daily life that are most affected by poor land use planning. Plantations often pollute local water supplies, forcing women to buy clean water with already limited incomes. Large plantations also increase the distance women and their children must travel to schools and healthcare facilities.
Other problems affect the whole village. For example, companies burn carbon-rich peatland to develop plantations, causing crisis-level haze that increases the risk of pulmonary disease and even leads to death.
Despite being disproportionately affected, women have little power to address these issues. They take informal actions, like organising protests, but remain systematically left out of the formal land use decisions that could have longer-term impacts or avoid these conflicts in the first place. Even when women are invited to attend official discussions, cultural norms dictate that only men should decide on public matters and deter women from participating.
Organising for representation in land use planning
The Jakarta-based Women Research Institute, a 2016 Global Forest Watch (GFW) Small Grants Fund recipient, has been working with the women of Sungai Berbari and other villages across Riau facing similar challenges to increase female representation in their official land use planning processes. They trained local women’s groups to use forest change data to influence where and how agricultural companies operate in nearby forests.
Women Research Institute held forums with these groups to address the problems each community faced, including water and air pollution. In many cases, the women did not have clear evidence that activities within concessions were the culprit. By overlaying village maps with datasets like tree cover loss, fire alerts and palm oil production suitability on the GFW platform (also available in Bahasa Indonesian), the women were able to link company operations to the environmental issues that affected their families and community.
In addition to robust forest change data, Women Research Institute provided training on public speaking and forest policy fact sheets to help women’s groups develop and implement advocacy strategies. For example, women’s groups in villages across Riau partnered to pressure the government to provide necessities like face masks during haze emergencies. In Teluk Binjai, another village in Riau, women convinced companies in the area to hire a midwife to address the lack of reproductive healthcare facilities in their village.
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Despite being disproportionately affected, women have little power to address these issues. They take informal actions, like organising protests, but remain systematically left out of the formal land use decisions that could have longer-term impacts or avoid these conflicts in the first place.
Global Forest Watch empowers women
For these women, concrete data about the forest around them is an essential tool to influence policy and hold companies accountable for their activities. They were amazed that they could zoom in to their village on the GFW map to see the impacts from nearby plantations and felt that the data gave legitimacy to their cause.
Women Research Institute was selected again as a 2017 Small Grants Fund recipient and will continue to use GFW in their work in Riau. This year, they plan to develop a training module that documents best practices for women’s advocacy training and creates a community-based early warning system for forest fires using GFW Fires. Village representatives in fire-prone areas will monitor the alerts and inform fire departments and local disaster management agencies when outbreaks occur. This near real-time response network will help communities mitigate haze issues by detecting fires before they burn out of control and holding responsible companies accountable.
Women Research Institute’s efforts in Indonesia show how tools like GFW can be used to improve public participation for women. Open access to timely forest data does more than just give women a greater voice; it increases their agency to improve their welfare.
Patrick Nease is the Monitoring and Evaluation Intern for Global Forest Watch, and Octavia is the Communications Manager for Global Forest Watch. This post is republished from the WRI blog.