Critical Indigenous Rights Studies

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The field of ‘critical indigenous rights studies’ is a complex one that benefits from an interdisciplinary perspective and a realist (as opposed to an idealised) approach to indigenous peoples. This book draws on sociology of law, anthropology, political sciences and legal sciences in order to address emerging issues in the study of indigenous rights and identify directions for future research. The first part of the volume investigates how changing identities and cultures impact rights protection, analysing how policies on development and land, and processes such as migration, interrelate with the mobilisation of identities and the realisation of rights. In the second part, new approaches related to indigenous peoples’ rights are scrutinised as to their potential and relevance. They include addressing legal tensions from an indigenous peoples’ rights perspective, creating space for counter-narratives on international law and designing new instruments. Throughout the text, case studies with wide geographical scope are presented, ranging from Latin America (the book’s focus) to Egypt, Rwanda and Scandinavia.

Author(s): Giselle Corradi, Koen de Feyter, Ellen Desmet, Katrijn Vanhees
Series: Routledge Research in Human Rights Law
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2019

Language: English
Pages: 249
Tags: Human Rights Law, Indigenous

Chapter 1

Introduction: The contours of a field of critical indigenous rights studies

Giselle Corradi, Koen De Feyter, Ellen Desmet, and Katrijn Vanhees

Part 1 - Changing identities and cultures

Chapter 2

Indigeneity vs Development: Nubian rights mobilisation in Egypt

Maja Janmyr

Chapter 3

Politics of oneness and Twa’s struggle for land: questioning identity discourses in Rwanda

Katrijn Vanhees

Chapter 4

The impact of migration processes on indigenous peoples’ rights. Challenges for identity and culture

Asier Martínez de Bringas

Part 2 - Innovating the law

Dealing with legal tensions in light of indigenous peoples’ rights

Chapter 5

A dual perspective on the right to enjoy the benefits of scientific progress

Fons Coomans

Chapter 6

Protecting traditional cultural expressions – copyright tensions and human rights opportunities?

Kelly Breemen

Creating space for counter-narratives within international law

Chapter 7

Indigenous people involvement in the REDD+ global debate: Case study from the Amazon basin

Liliana Lozano

Chapter 8

The rights of Indigenous Peoples in the jurisprudence of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights: A Third World Approaches to International Law assessment to advance their protection in the Inter-American Human Rights System

Salvador Herencia Carrasco

 

Designing new instruments

Chapter 9

The 2005 Draft Nordic Sámi Convention and the Implementation of the Right of the Sámi People to Self-determination

Dorothée Cambou

Chapter 10

Legislation coordination and cooperation mechanisms between indigenous and ordinary jurisdictions: reflections on progress and setbacks in Ecuador

Lieselotte Viaene and Guillermo Fernández-Maldonado

Index