AbCF Training Course - Top End Aboriginal Rangers Qualified in Carbon Farming and Co-Benefits Verification
Opportunity - 10 Deserts Indigenous Fire Traineeships
ISFMI’s Cissy Gore Birch Addresses the GEF Council
Global Environment Facility (GEF) Consultations with Civil Society on Traditional Knowledge - Deadline for Registration Nov 15 2020
Reflections from Campo Grande - Themes Emerging from the 7th International Wildland Fire Conference (English/Português)
Save the Date for the 2021 North Australia Savanna Fire Forum
DFAT tweets on the achievements of the ISFMI in Africa during Australia Africa Week
A role for Indigenous land and fire management in natural disaster resilience, recommends Australia’s 2019-2020 Bushfires Royal Commission
Access the 10 Deserts Seasonal Fire Poster
2020 North Australia Savanna Fire Forum Releases Final Report
IPBES Call for Contributions on Indigenous and Local Knowledge Extended to 15 September
In Memoriam. Garth Owen-Smith 1944-2020.
Notification: IKI Small Grants Applications Now Open. Submission Window 5 February 2020 – 5 March 2020.
Vacancy: Post-Doctoral Research Associate in Indigenous and Local Knowledges Royal Holloway University of London Leverhulme Centre for Wildfires, Environment and Society.
Indigenous Fire Management sparks global interest at International Wildland Fire Conference, Brazil
Aboriginal Carbon Foundation Releases Report verifying Kowanyama Carbon Project Core Benefits
Botswana Delegation visits northern Australia for Learning Exchange and Signing of MOU
Botswana Australia Community Fire Exchange
From the 11 to 21 May 2019 the International Savanna Fire Management (ISFMI) hosted a delegation of indigenous rangers and leading fire scientists from Northern Australia into Botswana.
ISFMI Botswana Pilot Project Inception Meeting
On the 7-8 November 2018 the ISFMI project hosted an inception meeting at the University of Botswana to share stories and exchange knowledge on savanna fire management and carbon abatement.
Nature Communications Article Reaffirms the Potential of Savanna Fire Management
New Nature Communications article finds that savanna fires produce significant emissions globally, but if managed effectively could provide an important mitigation opportunity, particularly in African least developed countries.