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HOW TO NAVIGATE THE COMPENDIUM

The Compendium is a work in progress and is only an initial assessment intended as a start. Our aim is that this Compendium will become an open-source and participatory effort to maintain up-to-date knowledge regarding CJ-JT work globally with a focus on Global South.

We recognize that this work will always be incomplete, and that there are many more organisations that are not in this list as well as many significant individuals who have been doing this work for a very long time that we have not included. We are also aware of other mappings and are in a process to complement and combine related sources and mappings.

The Compendium is undergoing Phase 1 of a review process.

Phase 2 of the review process is to discuss with the field how we can better represent Indigenous Peoples, communities and tribes and bring in the campaigns and movements that are represented in other mappings (such as the Environmental Justice Atlas), particularly those led by Indigenous Peoples and individuals who are leading resistance. We welcome any thoughts and feedback you might have on how best to do this.

The Compendium is split into the following sections which you can navigate via the tabs in this spreadsheet:

CJ-JT Bibliography Campaigns and NGOs Funders and Regranters Toolkits for Funders

Initiatives listed in Campaigns and NGOs and Funders and Regranters are organised by 5 Regions: Global, Africa, Asia/Pacific, Latin America & The Caribbean and Global North Allies, these are further identifiable by indiviudal countries. You can further navigate these tabs via the CTRL F function on your keyboard to search for key words, organisation titles and type or key CJ-JT themes.

The key themes of work you will find listed under the Current focus/area coloum. Climate Justice is often an umbrella term and is contiunally expanding, we are defining this work as anything with an intersectional approach and a focus on the people on the front lines of injustice.

Broad themes may include:

Labour Justice, Justice for Indigenous Peoples, Environmental Justice, Racial Justice, Justice for Peoples with Disability, Economic Justice, Health Justice, Land Justice, Intergenerational Justice, Gender Justice

Further examples of key themes include but are not limited to:

Human rights, Indigenous peoples rights, Disability rights and inclusion, Gender equality, Young people, Intergenerational equity, Territorial rights, Land management, Food sovereignty, Agroecology, Extractivism, Migration, Disaster response and preparation, Movement building, Awareness raising, etc.