Our Manifesto 2026-2030

Our manifesto
2026 - 2030

Co-created by Coalition members over 18 months, our Manifesto charts how we nurture values, exchange strategies, and grow resilient movements. In our Manifesto, we set the direction we want to take for 2026-2030, building on our strengths to respond to emerging opportunities and threats.

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Finance in Common Summit 2023

Our work

With our members and partners, we work to ensure that frontline communities have the information, power and resources to determine their own development paths, and to use their own voice to hold development banks and international companies accountable for their impacts on people and the planet. Read about our collective impacts here.

  • Connect: We link local communities and Indigenous Peoples with information, skills, tools, resources and allies for peer learning, capacity-building, solidarity, and collective action.
  • Protect: We facilitate safety, protection and advocacy support for those facing threats.
  • Mobilize: we co-create strategies with local communities, Indigenous Peoples and allies at national, regional, cross-regional and global levels to increase transparency, accountability and participation by public development banks.
  • Visibilize: we amplify the stories and perspectives of local communities and Indigenous Peoples, showcase their solutions, and expose the impacts of harmful development activities.

Stories, advocacy & campaigns

Check out our stories about community-led struggles, find out about our latest advocacy efforts, and join our collective campaigns!

 

 

The Indigenous communities struggling to save the Apayao river in the Philippines

Check out this powerful blog by Jillie Karl Basan on the struggle to save the Apayao river and defend the rights of the local Indigenous communities.

Learning together: communities in Zimbabwe join forces to demand their rights

In the mineral-rich district of Mutoko (northern Zimbabwe), local communities are facing serious rights violations connected to mining projects, and in particular black granite mining. In the past three years, four children drowned and died after falling in the open pits that were left ...

Newsletter – March 2023

Check out the June 2023 edition of our newsletter to read updates from our members and partners around the world, their inspiring stories, and useful resources!

Civil Society Organizations Make Recommendations to the Draft of the IDB’s Access to Information Policy

A group of CSOs from Latin America and the United States sent a letter to the Inter-American Development Bank to present 15 recommendations for its draft Access to Information Policy.

A Local Organization Participates in COP27

Climate change and the socio-environmental crisis pose an existential threat to humanity. The roles of individuals, communities, and advocacy organizations are vital to searching for and developing solutions. All modern environmental declarations, from Rio de Janeiro in 1992 to the most recent ...

Newsletter – December 2022

Welcome to the new edition of the Coalition’s quarterly newsletter, “The power of collective struggles”! In this newsletter you will find some updates about their work, including: COP27: reflections from our partners on a bittersweet deal Colombia: celebrates the ratification of the ...

Uzbekistan: the anatomy of fear

Uzbekistan has become a major recipient of development bank funding in Central Asia. But as a recent visit confirms, the space for civil society is extremely restricted and, if people don't complain, it is simply because they're too afraid.

Open letter: international groups call for the respect of the right to protest and express solidarity with the Rios Vivos Movement

In a joint open letter, a group of over 25 international organizations has expressed serious concerns for the threats faced by the human rights defenders who are part of Movimiento Rios Vivos and who are leading a powerful struggle against the Hidroituango dam. The 25 groups are calling on the ...

Open Letter From Civil Society Group Regarding the Election Process of the Future President of the IDB

A group of civil society organizations from several countries in the region, partners and allies of the Coalition for Human Rights in Development, addressed an open letter to the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) regarding the current selection process for the Bank's presidency. The ...
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Coalition’s updates

In this section, you can find updates about our Coalition’s processes and structures (e.g.: updates from the Steering Committee, our strategy-setting process, etc.).

Faith’s Blog: Why I Joined the Coalition

Faith’s Blog: Why I Joined the Coalition

Community members' willingness to fight for their right to survive is unmatched. They are prepared to go the extra mile, set aside their own interest, and work for the benefit of the unit. It is difficult to express the challenges and risks that grassroots human rights defenders are exposed to and how far they are willing to go to ensure justice prevails.
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Members Map

The Coalition has over 100 members based in around 50 countries.
Click here to check who our members are and learn more about their work.

OUR KEY AREAS OF WORK

 

CRE Homepage

COMMUNITY RESOURCE EXCHANGE

The CRE is a system to facilitate collaborations and co-develop strategies with and among communities, who are defending their rights in the context of international investments and development projects.

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DEFENDERS IN DEVELOPMENT

A global campaign to prevent and address risks that human rights defenders face when raising their voices about projects funded by development banks.

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REGIONAL WORK

Together with our members and allies, we work at the national and regional level to strengthen capacity, coordination, and advocacy around development finance and human rights.

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A community-led energy transition

With our Coalition’s members and partners across Asia, Africa and Latin America, we are pushing for a community-led response to climate change by transforming the economic and energy system, and making it more bottom up. As part of this collective and cross-regional work, we are

  • developing joint demands and a joint narrative on a community-led approach to the just energy transition and dignified, equitable energy access;
  • amplifying stories of communities negatively affected by extractivist energy projects and showcasing their resistance, perspectives, and ideas for a different economic model;
  • coordinating advocacy efforts and engaging in spaces such as the COP or the G20;
  • producing collaborative research on the negative impacts of the current approach to the energy transition and advocating for community-led alternatives.
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About Development Finance & the Early Warning System

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