Videos

People and Plants produces videos on a wide range of topics, and for a variety of purposes, including:

  • Cultural Landscapes and Community Conservation

  • Conserving Endangered Traditional Food Systems

  • Bringing The Voices of Local Groups Into Policy-Making 

  • Technical Information and Policy Advice 

  • Participatory Video and Grassroots Exchange


YouTube Channel

People and Plants International has created a YouTube Channel to share the videos produced through our different programs. From recipe videos to basket making, and case studies exploring the environmental, social, and political dimensions of traditional management systems, our channel will continue to grow and showcase PPI's video work, produced in collaboration with local organizations and media teams from around the world. 

Ethical video and filmmaking

People and Plants and Voices for BioJustice develop and follow Video Ethics Guidelines as part of our broader work on ethics in research, project design and implementation. Video Ethics Guidelines include steps necessary to receive prior informed consent, acknowledgement of participants, use of material, and other aspects of ethical video production.


Cultural Landscapes in Mount Cameroon

A series of videos is under production together with manuals and posters on particular resources, products, and practices. To date, these include basket-making, wrapper leaves, and traditional food recipes, with the next stage of video, manual and poster production in 2025 focused on yams, mushrooms, and wild and cultivated greens and vegetables.

Traditional Bakweri Baskets of Mount Cameroon

The Mount Cameroon Cultural Forests program produced a video series documenting and celebrating the traditional basket-making of the Bakweri people of Mount Cameroon. Baskets incorporate a range of forest and other species, and the harvesting and processing of materials, and making of baskets, grows from knowledge developed over generations.

Learn more.


Recipes from the Interweave of People and Place

In 2022, People and Plants International, through the Traditional Foodways Program, produced a recipe video series that documents and celebrates delicious and healthy traditional cuisines interwoven with the forests and environments from which they grow. The series provides a glimpse into the layers of knowledge that go into a recipe – the wisdom of generations and innovations of individual cooks, farmers, hunters, and gatherers. We also explore the traditional management systems that produce these nutritious, diverse, and seasonal foods and ingredients, as well as the threats to these environments and cultural practices.

We invite you to watch the overview video below presenting the series, and the collection of recipe videos featuring dishes from The Philippines, Ecuador, Cameroon, Mexico and Indonesia.


Conserving Endangered Traditional Food Systems

People and Plants also collaborates with partners around the world to produce videos on Traditional Foodways that illustrate the links between cultural and biological diversity, and share the extraordinary traditions and practices of indigenous peoples and local communities, and our work to conserve and support these endangered food systems.

 

traditional breadmaking in South Africa

As part of the Traditional Foodways Program, People and Plants partners in South Africa produced a documentary, co-created with local community members from the Agter Parkhuis, offering an intimate exploration of the Cederberg Soetsuurdeegbrood breadmaking tradition.

Learn more.

 

Wrapper leaves of Mount Cameroon

People and Plants has produced a video on wrapper leaves used for cooking traditional Bakweri and other foods around Mount Cameroon. Wrapper leaves are used around the world in traditional foodways. The video follows wrapper leaf harvesters in the forest, as they process the leaves, bring them to market, and use the leaves to prepare foods. 

 

The importance of milpa in mexico

In Mexico, the livelihoods of many Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities grow from the milpa agroforestry system. Milpa is centered on corn, the dietary staple, but it also produces a rich assortment of seasonal vegetables and fruits, and medicinal, ornamental and dye plants, among others. However, external pressure on small-scale agriculture, has never been greater. The milpa system has been undermined by government programs, modernized agriculture techniques, and the removal of trade barriers which have flooded the market with cheap imported foods. In addition to the erosion of traditional ecological knowledge and biodiversity loss, the increased availability of industrialized foods has also contributed to increased rates of diabetes, especially among children.

Learn more.

 

celebrating Kichwa culture and territory

These videos is part of ongoing activities to reassess the importance and value of traditional production systems in the Ecuadorian Amazon. The video addresses the various social, cultural and economic changes generated by development, and the activities carried out by the Association of Indigenous Communities of Arajuno (ACIA), and the Tzatzapi Community (Canelos) – which include the recovery of forgotten seeds, the intergenerational transmission of knowledge and the celebration of their traditional cuisine.

Learn more.

 

TRADITIONAL MEZCAL PRODUCTION

People and Plants, through the Traditional Foodways and Voices for BioJustice programs, has produced a series of videos documenting the environmental, social, and political dimensions of Mezcal production and commercialization in Mexico. Watch below a short overview video that explores these issues. A series of interviews with community members, producers, researchers, and others, is available here.


Bringing The Voices of Local Groups Into Policy-Making

People and Plants collaborates with the University of Cape Town and others on the Voices for BioJustice Program. As part of this program, we produce simple, catchy videos that bring local groups’ views and experiences to policy makers. We also train local collaborators in filmmaking techniques, and coordinate a global network.

In a series of videos we explore issues of ABS and Scope in more depth with a range of individuals. We invite you to watch the Voices for BioJustice ABS and Scope videos here. 


Technical Information and Policy Advice

Making a dendrometer band for community forest inventories using locally sourced materials (2005). Dendrometer bands are a useful tool for measuring tree growth rates. This short instructional video shows how to make a dendrometer band using locally available, cheap materials, as an alternative to commercially-made bands which are both expensive and out of the reach of most Mexican farmers

El cuidado de los árboles maderables en la Sierra de Zongolica (Management of timber forest resources in Sierra de Zongolica), Mexico (2013). This video is aimed at farmers from the higher elevation forests of the Sierra de Zongolica, Veracruz, Mexico, who for a number of years have attempted, with varying degrees of success, to cultivate and manage trees for timber within their agricultural plots.

La importancia de los montes y plantaciones forestales en la Sierra de Zongolica (The importance of forests and family-owned timber plantations in the Sierra de Zongolica), Veracruz, Mexico (2013). Filmed and edited by indigenous graduates this DVD captures some of the experiences of small holders managing their forest resources in the lower and higher elevation forests, offering general and technical advice.


Participatory Video and Grassroots Exchange

A number of videos are produced with indigenous people, farmers, community-based organizations, indigenous universities, and others, facilitating the exchange of ideas, or addressing issues relating to local forest management, conservation, and cultural diversity.

Ixtlamachilistli tlen masewaltlatokallistli

Ixtlamachilistli tlen masewaltlatokallistli Duraznotla, Tehuipango, Sierra de Zongolica (2013). Filmed and edited by Fortunata Panzo, a Nahua graduate from the indigenous university UVI, this video provides an inside portrait of the traditional knowledge of the Nahua from the Sierra de Zongolica. It is part of a social revitalization process that seeks to strengthen local agroforest-based food and production systems for social and environmental well-being.

Cafetales bajo sombra (Shade-grown coffee agroforestry), Pahuatlán, Puebla (2012). This video was made by students from the Secondary School of Xolotl in the community of Xolotla (Pahuatlán, Puebla). It documents and reflects on the social, cultural, economic, and ecological importance of shade-grown coffee forest groves (cafetales).

Conociendo el Territorio (Knowing the territory), Sierra Norte de Puebla (2015). This video shows the journey made by the students of the Xolotl High School when recognizing and revalidating their territory, in which they learned about the natural resources and traditional knowledge of their Naguas communities, settled in the Sierra Norte de Puebla.

Exchange between Nahua students and farmers from Puebla and Veracruz. In August 2012, students from Xolotl high school in the community of Xolotla in the Sierra Norte de Puebla, visited Zincalco, a community in the Sierra de Zongolica, Veracruz. The two Nahua groups produce shade-grown coffee, and they exchanged stories and information about traditions that surround its cultivation, including music and dances.

IKI Colands Kapuas Hulu Indonesia
Addressing Challenges through Landscape Approaches in Kapuas Hulu. This video is about activities related to NTFP development facilitation, including forest honey (Apis dorsata) and tengkawang or illipe nuts (Shorea sp.) in Kapuas Hulu, West Kalimantan, Indonesia.


ARCHIVE

Between 1992 and 2004, and as part of its partnership with UNESCO, WWF-UK and the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew, People and Plants produced seven videos demonstrating different aspects of practical methodologies in applied ethnoecology:

  • People, Gorillas and Forests: Ethnobotanical Methods and Multiple-use Management in Uganda. A.B. Cunningham (1997); VHS video, 27 minutes.

  • Saving the Wooden Rhino: Ethnobotanical Methods and Kenya’s Woodcarving Industry. A.B. Cunningham (2001); VHS video, 25 minutes.

  • Carvers, Conservation and Consumers. A.B. Cunningham (2001); VHS video, 11 minutes.

  • Carving a Future: 10 Lessons for Sustainable Woodcarving Enterprises. Camera, script and direction: Tony Cunningham; Editing: Gary Burke, Production Function; Music: Mpingi Drummers; Narration: Michael Loney, 2001, VHS video, 24 minutes.

  • Medicinal Plants in the Hidden Land of Dolpo: Working with Himalayan Healers at Shey Phoksundo National Park. Camera, script and direction: Yildiz Aumeeruddy-Thomas (2001); VHS video, 26 minutes.

  • People and Plants in Practice. Scripted and edited: Tony Cunningham; Filmed: Tony Cunningham, Yildiz Aumeeruddy and Gary Martin, 2001, VHS video, 25 minutes.

  • Tree Skin: Methods for Studying People's Use of Bark. Camera, script and direction: Tony Cunningham; Editing: Nic Zimmermann & Pippa Hetherington, 2003, VHS Video, 26 minutes.