1. Intensify the information, education, and communication drive on IPRA and the NCIP's delineation and titling program in all levels of government;
2. Fasttrack the identification, delineation, titling and registration of ancestral domain claims;
3. Continue the coordination and dialogue among government agencies, such as the DENR, DA, LRA, DAR and NCIP, on land and tenurial conflicts and overlapping claims involving ancestral lands;
4. Review and simplify existing NCIP policies, circulars, issuances, and guidelines, including the guidelines on the issuance of the FPIC, without sacrificing the welfare and concerns of IPs. The inclusive and full participation of IPs in the process shall be ensured while maintaining a meaningful collaboration/ partnership with CSOs, the private sector, national government agencies, and LGUs;
5. Improve and facilitate IP access to justice and traditional decision-making processes on the settlement of conflicts by the elders. Traditional practices and processes shall be documented and serve as reference for transfer of knowledge on conflict resolution, to strengthen IP decision making processes. Coordination among the DOJ, the Public Attorney's Office (PAO) and the Supreme Court, as well as the civil society, shall also be pursued towards advocating indigenous rights and increasing access by IPs to free and immediate legal services;
6. Assist ICCs/IPs in documenting cases resolved under indigenous justice systems, conflict resolution mechanisms and peace building processes, for NCIP to adequately defend the indigenous litigants. Documentation of cases is essential as written evidence is required by regular courts in cases filed against IPs;
7. Consider the IPRA provisions in discussions regarding Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) and other carbon forest engagements in the national and international arena;
8. Encourage ecotourism as a source of alternative or supplementary income, subject to community protocols on protection of indigenous knowledge systems and practices. Watershed management and the planning of ancestral waters to enhance biodiversity shall be considered in ancestral domain planning;
9. Ensure that IP data and statistics are up-to-date by including IP indicators, particularly the ethnicity variable, in the national censuses and related surveys and by ensuring the involvement of the NCIP from the preparatory activities up to the validation of the collected IP-related statistics. The NCIP shall also take the lead in orienting LGUs with IP population on gathering IP ethnicity variable statistics, and utilizing these in formulating socioeconomic profiles. The NCIP shall ensure that institutional coordination and agreement on this concern is established; and
10. Strengthen partnership among ICCs, LGUs, NGAs and CSOs to ensure synergy in activities for IPs. Partnerships shall be tapped in: ensuring compliance with the FPIC process; formulating and implementating ADSDPPs and their integration in CLUPs and local development plans; and providing capacity building and training in entrepreneurial skills enhancement, business management, bookkeeping, communication, product development, training and marketing.