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!

 

 

Senegal: 26 people arrested for peacefully discussing how to demand fair compensation in the context of a train project

Update: on October 27th, after 5 days in detention, the group of 26 human rights defenders was finally released.   Dakar, 26 October 2022 - On October 22, in Dakar, the police arrested Babacar Diouf, programme officer of the non-governmental organization Lumière Synergie pour ...

Civil Society Organizations Ask the Inter-American Development Bank to Strengthen the Revision Process of Its Access to Information Policy

A group of +25 organizations, members and allies of the Coalition for Human Rights in Development, sent a letter to the Inter-American Bank Development (IDB), to strengthen the review process of its Access to Information Policy (AIP) and present their recommendations.  The IDB began this ...

Linking and learning with human and environmental rights activists from South Caucasus and Central Asia

By Shoira Olimova, Medea Turashvili, Nina Lesikhina - originally published by the International Accountability Project “Through information sharing, we are able to know basic understanding and potential impacts of a specific proposed project. It is also important to listen to the ...

Recommendations to ADB from Communities Facing Reprisals

Ahead of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) Annual Meeting, 45 civil society groups signed a joint letter with a series of recommendations for the ADB on how to prevent and address reprisals. September 21 - In light of the ongoing stakeholder consultations on the ADB Safeguard Review process, ...

Newsletter – September 2022

Welcome to the first edition of the Coalition's quarterly newsletter! Every three months, we will provide updates about the powerful work of our members and partners, spotlight some success stories, share inspiring testimonies about community-led struggles and provide a list of useful ...

Stop reprisals against environmental defender Sukhgerel Dugersuren

Over 130 civil society organizations have signed a joint letter to urge the authorities in Mongolia to stop reprisals against human rights defender Sukhgerel Dugersuren and to ensure that environmental defenders in the country can protect the environment without fearing reprisals.

CSOs response to the World Bank consultation on the proposal for a Financial Intermediary Fund for Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response

Thirty-three organisations from around the world have signed a statement arguing that the World Bank has not learnt crucial lessons from the Covid-19 pandemic and broader health financing evidence. Download the statement here In May, the World Bank (WB), in collaboration with the World ...

Civil society groups demand more engagement on the sidelines of the AfDB Annual Meetings

“Stop funding projects exacerbating climate change and human violations”  Civil society groups demand more engagement on the sidelines of the AfDB Annual Meetings 27 May, 2022 | Accra, Ghana Civil society organizations are calling on the African Development Bank (AfDB) to stop funding ...

Statement: CSOs speak out for transparency, participation and inclusion of traditional communities in the Leticia Pact

In 2019, the governments of seven countries (Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Suriname and Peru) signed the Leticia Pact, with the aim of facing the adverse environmental situation caused by the devastating fires registered that same year in the Amazon Basin.¹ There is a need to ...
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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.).

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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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