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Deborah Delgado Pugley

Rol:
Miembro del equipo técnico
Financiado por:
USAID & Gordon and Betty Moore Fundation
2021
La Contienda Legal especializada en Delitos Ambientales y Desarrollo Sostenible en la Amazonía, tiene por objetivo fomentar, desarrollar y fortalecer las destrezas legales, comunicativas y analíticas de estudiantes universitarios de la carrera de Derecho; así como concientizar y aumentar la visibilidad de los delitos ambientales, con el fin de que se comprendan su problemática e importancia. El eje temático de la Contienda es el Derecho Ambiental y la protección de la diversidad biológica de la Amazonía del Perú. Por ello, girará en torno a la importancia de proteger el ambiente y la problemática de los delitos ambientales. Asimismo, la Contienda incorporará un enfoque educativo y formativo a través una capacitación multidisciplinaria transversal que busca fortalecer y desarrollar distintas habilidades (jurídicas, argumentativas, de investigación, redacción, interculturalidad y género) de los y las estudiantes participantes.

The role of Academic Scientific Research in the Conservation of the Amazon. Enabling sustainable territorial development and mitigation of Climate Change

Rol:
Investigadora principal
Financiado por:
Fundación TINKER
2021-2022
The objective of this project is to identify the enabling conditions (context-specific characteristics and strategies) that lead to the success of the mechanism of Conditional Direct Transfers (TDC). By combining an analysis of TDC implementation practices in broader institutional and community contexts, the proposed research will provide practical guidance to MINAM in the form of enabling condition criteria (actionable indicators) in scaling up information. Since direct incentives are one of the fastest growing conservation mechanisms in the world, the findings of our study will also have regional and global applicability.

El rol de la Investigación Científico Académica en la Conservación de la Amazonía. Haciendo posible el desarrollo territorial sostenible y la mitigación del Cambio Climático

Rol:
Investigadora principal
Financiado por:  FONDECYT
2021-2022
The objective of this project is to create evidence about the contribution of academic-scientific knowledge to territorial development based on the value of the forest for the protection of biodiversity and the mitigation of climate change. This through a multi-stakeholder approach, focused in regional actors and indigenous peoples in the context of conservation areas in the San Martín and Ucayali regions. This with the aim of achieving coherence between regional development policies, promoted at the subnational level, and conservation strategies as a key step for achieving sustainability.
Rol:
Investigadora principal
Funded by: VLIR UOS
2018 - 2021
This project supports universities, indigenous communities, policy makers and other actors in the creation of institutional capacities to promote sustainable development and indigenous social inclusion in the Peruvian Amazon. The general objective is to co-produce a community and personalized REDD + plan, adapted to the needs of two tropical forest regions, Loreto and San Martín. As a result, this project will support Peru's commitments in the Paris Agreement and the SDGs, with in-depth knowledge and policy recommendations on forest conservation strategies that are efficient in terms of mitigation and adaptation to climate change, but also respectful of the claims of equity and sustainability raised by indigenous peoples.

Scaling-up the impact of voluntary sustainability standards: from niche labels to catalysts for systemic change

Rol:
Investigadora principal
2020 -2024
Funded by: Australian Research Council
This project aims to learn how global sustainability regulators, such as Fairtrade or the Rainforest Alliance, can more effectively address the large-scale regulatory issues of deforestation, land use conflicts, and recurring labor rights violations. The project will address this issue by analyzing and evaluating innovative regulatory schemes that were designed to have broad sectoral or jurisdictional impacts on critical social and environmental issues, based on case studies from Peru, Ecuador, and Indonesia.

Language contact in the Peruvian Amazon: a comparative study in the provinces of Datem de Marañón (Loreto) and Purús (Ucayali) from areal linguistics, socio-ecological systems and computer science

Rol:
Investigadora principal
2020 -2022
Funded by: Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú
The regions of Datem del Marañón (Loreto) and Purús (Ucayali) have a great linguistic diversity with a fundamental difference: in the first we find intense interaction between peoples of different linguistic families and in the second the vast majority of peoples in contact are from the Pano language family. In this context, this project aims to study the linguistic and social reality of the province of Datem in order to determine if we are dealing with a prototypical linguistic area. We will also compare the situation of this region with that of the Purús to understand the differences and the specific dynamics of the situations of inter- and intra-linguistic family contact.

Global Microbiome Network GoMiNe - Peru

Rol:
Investigadora principal
Funded by: Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
2020 - 2021
Peru is a country with an agricultural, natural and cultural biodiversity. Traditional peoples who eat natural diets are likely to harbor a highly diverse microbiota. The purpose of this project is to initiate a Global Microbiome Network (GoMiNe) to educate awareness of the value of natural food biodiversity and human microbiome biodiversity in people living traditional lifestyles, as well as considerations cultural and ethical in relation to the microbiome. The courses will also train students and teachers on standardized protocols for collecting and preserving microbiome samples, and will promote collaborative and interagency research and knowledge regarding the human microbiome.

Collaborative Research on the Indigenous Response to the Pandemic in the Peruvian Amazon

Rol:
Investigadora principal
Funded by: Social Science Research Council
2020
Covid-19 is dramatically affecting the Amazon regions of Peru. Faced with this, indigenous peoples' organizations have deployed a network response and a very agile reaction to the pandemic. Their self-organization has been essential in the context of subnational public health and social services systems completely overwhelmed by the pandemic. This research focuses on the Ucayali region, which has been severely affected by the pandemic. Its objective is to analyze and make explicit the potential that contemporary indigenous networks have to build resilience in the face of complex global health challenges, for which it asks about the particularities of this indigenous response.
Contienda lega
Tinker MSU
fondecyt
VLIRUOS
MELBOURE
ssrc
glomine
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