A paper I co-authored under Jaime Paneque-Gálvez regarding the use of drones in indigenous territorial defense was just published in Land. The article describes several projects undertaken in Latin America to help indigenous communities adopt drone technology in their efforts to protect their territories, and discusses several issues that arise in this context.
Grassroots Innovation Using Drones for Indigenous Mapping and Monitoring
Jaime Paneque-Gálvez, Nicolás Vargas-Ramírez, Brian M. Napoletano and Anthony Cummings
Land 2017 6(4): 86
DOI: 10.3390/land6040086
Abstract
Indigenous territories are facing increasing pressures from numerous 
legal and illegal activities that are pushing commodity frontiers within
 their limits, frequently causing severe environmental degradation and 
threatening indigenous territorial rights and livelihoods. In Central 
and South America, after nearly three decades of participatory mapping 
projects, interest is mounting among indigenous peoples in the use of 
new technologies for community mapping and monitoring as a means of 
defense against such threats. Since 2014, several innovative projects 
have been developed and implemented in the region to demonstrate and 
train indigenous communities in the use of small drones for territorial 
mapping and monitoring. In this paper, we report on five projects 
carried out in Peru, Guyana, and Panama. For each one we describe the 
context, main objectives, positive outcomes, challenges faced, and 
opportunities ahead. Preliminary results are promising and have gained 
the interest of many indigenous societies who envision this technology 
as a powerful tool to protect their territories and strengthen their 
claims regarding specific environmental liabilities and justice issues. 
Based on the results presented here and a review of previous similar 
studies, we offer a critical discussion of some of the main 
opportunities and challenges that we foresee regarding the use of small 
drones for indigenous territorial mapping and monitoring. In addition, 
we elaborate on why a careful, well thought-out, and progressive 
adoption of drones by indigenous peoples may trigger grassroots 
innovations in ways conducive to greater environmental justice and 
sustainability.
 
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