The challenges identified are urgent; over one-third of India's farmers are unrecognised tenant cultivators, women perform 60% of agricultural work yet hold only 30% of land records, urban housing remains increasingly unaffordable, renewable energy conflicts persist, and wildlife conservation continues to displace communities. These issues affect 80% of India's population and threaten the sustainability of development itself. However, the conference also illuminated solutions. The Model Land Leasing Act, innovative urban housing models, community-based wildlife stewardship, and South-South cooperation offer concrete pathways forward. Most importantly, a fundamental shift in mindset emerged among stakeholders across sectors acknowledged that conflict over land serves no one and that inclusive approaches benefit everyone. Government officials recognised the need for more participatory land systems. Private sector representatives understood that sustainable business requires community inclusion. The willingness to seek win-win solutions rather than perpetuate exclusionary practices represents genuine progress. As recommendations transition to policy and action, the real test lies ahead: translating dialogue into tangible change. The conference proved diverse voices can unite productively. Now comes the essential work of ensuring India's development genuinely includes all citizens and protects its natural heritage rather than leaving the most vulnerable behind.