Ponies in the New Forest
The Government has now recognised New Forest Commoners under the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities (FCNM).
The Ministry for Housing, Communities and Local Government has confirmed that even without being formally named in legislation, the New Forest Commoners are now ‘entitled to the rights and protections enshrined in the FCNM.’
It added: ‘this department offers reassurance that the New Forest Commoners culture will be preserved in any future devolution or reorganisation arrangements.’
National minority status is not symbolic. It creates a framework of obligations for how Government and public bodies must now act in relation to the New Forest Commoners as a distinct cultural community; a new line of defence and protection.
The FCNM establishes a framework of legal rights and protections which now apply to practising Commoners, and which public bodies must adhere to.
The most relevant articles in the Convention are:
Article 4 — Equality and Fair Treatment → Prevent harm
Article 5 — Protection of Culture → Sustain commoning
Article 6 — Understanding and Respect → Fix institutional ignorance
Article 12 — Knowledge, Education and Awareness → Build long-term recognition
Article 15 — Voice in Decision-Making → Secure voice and influence
Article 16 — Protection from Harmful Change → Guard against structural erosion
Devolution and Local Government Reorganisation (LGR) create real risks to representation and continuity, and exacerbate pre-existing pressures.
Without clear application of FCNM, Commoners risk losing voice, influence, and protection.
With FCNM, there is a clear basis to safeguard the future of commoning as part of the developing structure of the new unitary and mayoral authorities.
The New Forest Commoners are:
Recognition under FCNM is not creating something new — it is acknowledging an existing reality.
Taken together, these Articles establish that Commoners must be treated fairly and without disadvantage, their culture must be actively sustained and their way of life must be understood and recognised by authorities.
Commoners’ voices must be heard and reflected in decision-making and structural change must not undermine the long-term viability of commoning.
The Government engages with the Council of Europe around proper application of FCNM for Commoners, and seeks formal naming at the next “FCNM cycle” (estimated 2028/9).
We continue to engage with Government about what this will mean on the ground.
Alignment of local authorities and institutions in how they engage with the new obligations.
Maintain pressure to ensure these principles are applied in practice as new authorities develop.
Further engage with Government on what impact FCNM recognition will have on housing allocation, authority representation, DEFRA policy and funding opportunities.
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