Board of Directors

The Tenure Facility is governed by a Board of Directors composed of leading individuals from Indigenous Peoples, community organisations, civil society, international development and the financial sector.  The Board is the foundation’s highest decision-making body and guides strategy, policies and budgets.

*Founding Board Members

Joan Carling
Indigenous Peoples’ Major Group for Sustainable Development (IPMG)

Joan Carling is an indigenous activist from the Cordillera, Philippines. She has been working on indigenous issues at the grassroots to international levels for more than 20 years. Her field of expertise includes human rights, sustainable development, environment, and climate change, as well as on the principles and application of Free Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC). She was the Secretary General of the Asia Indigenous Peoples Pact (AIPP) – a coalition of 50 indigenous organizations across Asia, from 2008 to 2016. Ms. Carling was appointed by the UN ECOSOC as an expert- member of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UNPFii) for 2014-16. She is currently the co-convenor of the Indigenous Peoples’ Major Group (IPMG) for Sustainable Development and works directly with indigenous organizations and networks across the globe.

Myrna Cunningham (Chair)*
Association for Women’s Rights in Development (AWID)
Woman of Distinction Award 2012

Dr. Myrna Cunningham is a leading indigenous authority on women’s rights. She serves as the Chair of the guiding committee of the Pawanka Fund, an indigenous-led grant making effort supporting Indigenous Peoples initiatives engaged in promoting and protecting traditional knowledge, well-being, rights and self-determined development. Dr. Cunningham served as Chair of the Permanent UN Forum on Indigenous Issues until 2012. In 2014, she was appointed as Special Ambassador for FAO, and she served as Adviser to the President of the UN General Assembly for the World Conference of Indigenous People.

A Miskitu from the Wangki river region of Nicaragua, Dr. Cunningham served as governor of the North Atlantic Autonomous Region and as a Member of the Nicaraguan Parliament and member of the Regional Autonomous Council of the North Autonomous Region from 1990 to 1997. Dr. Cunningham currently advises the Alliance of Indigenous Women of Central America and Mexico, the International Indigenous Women’s Forum, and the Disability Rights Fund. She is the founding Chancellor of the University of the Autonomous Regions of the Nicaraguan Caribbean Coast. Dr. Cunningham received her medical degree from the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Nicaragua. She also holds an honorary doctorate from the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.

Eleni Kyrou
European Investment Bank

Eleni Kyrou is a development practitioner with over 25 years of experience across the global South. Currently engaged on impact policy at the European Investment Bank (EIB), she previously served as the EIB’s Head of Representation to Ethiopia and the African Union, as well as EIB’s Social Development and Gender Lead. In that latter role, she spearheaded the development of institutional policies related to gender equality and human rights, overseeing the integration of human rights in EIB's sustainability framework in 2013 and developing the first ever EIB Group’s Strategy on Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment. She has a strong operational background and has worked across different sectors and regions including Northern, Eastern and Southern Africa, Central and South America, South and East Asia, as well as within the European Union. She has worked for academic institutions, civil society organisations and multilateral/international agencies in the context of social development; gender planning; urban development and urban governance; access to housing for low income population and informal settlers; and relief aid and post-conflict recovery. She holds an MSc in Urban Development Planning from University College London and a BSc in Development and Economics from the School of Oriental and African Studies. She is proficient in English, Greek, Spanish, French, German, and Portuguese.

Carl Lindgren
Independent Economic Advisor

Carl is an independent economic advisor. He grew up outside Gothenburg and studied Forestry and Business at university. Later on, he moved to Stockholm and started on what was intended to be a short period at KPMG and stayed for over 30 years ending as chairman. He has an MBA from Warwick University and a bachelor’s degree in geosciences, and an on-going master’s studies in Hydrology as well as Climate Change at Stockholm University. After leaving KPMG in 2013 he directed his efforts into trying to pay back to a world, which involves everything from global issues (climate change, children's rights, etc.) to individual projects (a school in Tanzania, mentorship etc.)

Juan Martínez
IADB

Juan Martinez, Social Practice Leader (SPL) at the Environmental and Social Solutions Unit (ESG) at the Inter-American Development Bank (IADB) where he is leading the Social Sustainability Standards such as indigenous peoples, stakeholders engagement among others for projects and programs that the IADB finances. Prior to his role as Social Practice Leader (SPL), Juan worked at the World Bank for more than twenty years in multiple regions of the world as a Senior Social Development Specialist these included East Asia and the Pacific; Southeast Asia, Africa (Zimbabwe), Latin America and the Caribbean. During his career he carried out multiple field assignments working close to clients in Indonesia, Central America, and Mexico. In this role he was responsible for leading the practical implementation of social inclusion schemes by identifying ways to ensure the full participation of indigenous peoples and local communities in the development processes. Juan has led multiple land and community forestry projects, also worked in multiple other sectors around the world that promote the participation of indigenous peoples and local communities by addressing the fundamental rights to their territories, forests and natural resources.

Dr Mary Hobley
Author, Proforest Initiative and the Commonwealth Forestry Association

Dr Mary Hobley is a development practitioner. She has worked for over 35 years in forestry, governance and institutional reform in South and Southeast Asia, Africa and Europe. Over her career she has focused on a range of issues affecting rural livelihoods including forest rights, gender relations, land tenure, migration, local governance and political engagement. She has been closely involved with the development of community forestry both in Nepal and globally, including writing and editing several books. Building on her long engagement in Nepal and internationally, she works as an independent adviser to multilateral, bilateral and non-government organisations focusing her work on the multiple drivers of change including migration and political and institutional processes. She holds a PhD from the Australian National University and worked at the Overseas Development Institute in London as a policy researcher. She is a trustee on the boards of Proforest Initiative and the Commonwealth Forestry Association and has authored and co-authored numerous publications.

Christine Halvorson
Programme Director, Rainforest Foundation US

Christine Halvorson is the Program Director of Rainforest Foundation US. She oversees the organization's program portfolio working closely with partners in the Amazon and Central America and brings extensive expertise in institutional strengthening, land management planning and titling, policy and campaigning. Prior to joining RFUS in 1999, she was a director of Amanaka’a Amazon Network. She has worked on issues connecting the environment and social justice for nearly thirty years, both in the Amazon as well as locally in New York City where she serves on the board of ABC No Rio, a cultural center in the Lower East Side. She holds a Master’s in Anthropology from The New School for Social Research. She is fluent in Portuguese, Spanish and rusty French.

Dr. Albert K. Barume
Human rights lawyer, lecturer and researcher

Dr. Albert K. Barume is a human rights lawyer, lecturer and researcher with over 25 years of experience at national, regional and international levels, working on indigenous peoples’ rights, natural resources issues and conflicts in Africa. Dr. Barume is a former Chairperson of the Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (EMRIP), a subsidiary organ of the United Nations’ Human Rights Council (HRC); he worked as a Senior Specialist on Indigenous Peoples for the International Labour Organisation (ILO) in Geneva; he served as Expert on indigenous peoples for the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR) for over eight years; and he is currently an Expert on Mali for the United Nations Security Council. Dr. Barume holds a PhD in law from the University of Essex in the United Kingdom and a Master in Environmental Management (MEM) from the University of Yale in the USA.

Viviana Figueroa
Member of the Indigenous Women Network on Biodiversity (RMIB), and of the International Indigenous Forum on Biodiversity (IIFB)

Viviana Figueroa, Omaguaca indigenous women, has over 20 years of professional experience working on traditional knowledge, indigenous people’s rights and women empowerment and rights. She is an international consultant and member of the Indigenous Women Network on Biodiversity (RMIB), an international indigenous organization working on biodiversity and traditional knowledge. She is also member of the International Indigenous Forum on Biodiversity (IIFB).She also worked as professor on indigenous people’s rights, legal advisor for the National Congress on indigenous people’s rights, and member of Advisory Committee for UNICEF and the Convention on Biological Diversity.
Viviana holds a PhD in Law and a degree in law from the University of Buenos Aires (UBA), Argentina.

Lesle Jansen
Head of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities Resource Rights at Jamma International

Lesle Jansen is currently serving as the Head of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities Resource Rights at Jamma International as UK charity supporting community conservation iniatives in Africa. Lesle brings a host of legal experiences in support of communities’ rights with special interests in human rights, indigenous & environmental law, international and regional law, along with forming part of the South African Khoikhoi indigenous communities. She formerly served on the special mechanism for indigenous communities in Africa within the African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights. Throughout her professional journey, Lesle has actively contributed to various aspects of Benefit Sharing, specifically in relation to traditional knowledge and sustainable practices.

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