Why Culture Is the Missing Link in Global Land Restoration

Author: Murat Gungor, Website and Online Strategy Consultant   |   March 12, 2026

Cristal Ange

Photo credit: UNCCD/G20 Global Land Inititative

In this episode of Land Talks, powered by the G20 Global Land Initiative, we explore how culture-centered approaches are reshaping land restoration, water governance, and conservation policy—starting from the ground up with our guest, Cristal Ange.

Cristal is the General Director of the Caribbean Environmental Heritage Foundation, and has over 20 years of experience working with indigenous and local communities in Colombia and across South America. She explains why culture is the keystone of conservation, and how meaningful, lasting environmental restoration only happens when local worldviews, sacred sites, and traditional knowledge are fully respected and integrated.

What you’ll learn in this eposide

  • Integrating indigenous knowledge into biodiversity protection
  • Jaguar conservation in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta
  • Sacred sites, water governance, and cultural values of water
  • Bridging local communities with national and international policy
  • How restoration begins not just in ecosystems—but in the human mindset

This conversation highlights why global environmental goals only succeed when they make sense locally, and how indigenous perspectives offer critical solutions to today’s land and climate challenges.

Listen to the podcast