Indigenous Rights in the Modern Era : : Regaining What Has Been Lost / / Bertus de Villiers.

International law is rich in promise but poor in detail and practical application about the rights of indigenous people. This book focuses on practical measures that have been implemented in states to give effect to free, prior and informed consent (FPIC); self-determination by indigenous people; sp...

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Superior document:Studies in Territorial and Cultural Diversity Governance ; 18
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Place / Publishing House:Leiden ;, Boston : : Brill | Nijhoff,, 2023.
©2023
Year of Publication:2023
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:Studies in Territorial and Cultural Diversity Governance ; 18.
Physical Description:1 online resource (469 pages) :; illustrations.
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spelling Villiers, Bertus de, author.
Indigenous Rights in the Modern Era : Regaining What Has Been Lost / Bertus de Villiers.
Regaining What Has Been Lost
1st ed.
Leiden ; Boston : Brill | Nijhoff, 2023.
©2023
1 online resource (469 pages) : illustrations.
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource rdacarrier
Studies in Territorial and Cultural Diversity Governance ; 18
Description based on print version record.
International law is rich in promise but poor in detail and practical application about the rights of indigenous people. This book focuses on practical measures that have been implemented in states to give effect to free, prior and informed consent (FPIC); self-determination by indigenous people; special electoral measures to benefit indigenous people; and the role of advisory bodies to advocate for indigenous interests. In many comparative works there are often only scant or brief reference to some country-experiences, but in this book several case studies are explored in depth to promote a greater understanding of the self-determination arrangements that have been implemented. These case studies represent a form of glocalisation , whereby global principles are applied to find local solutions, and local solutions in turn inform greater clarity and specificity to global principles. At the end of each chapter key lessons that can be drawn from the respective case studies are identified in the hope that those may inform developments in other countries and in international law.
English
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Acknowledgements -- 1 Setting the Scene -- 2 Recognising Indigenous Sovereignty – Sort Of  Essential Principles in International Law to Operationalise the Right to Self-determination of Indigenous Peoples -- 1 Background -- 2 The Road in International Law to Collective Rights and Self-determination for Indigenous People -- 3 Indigenous People: Legal Entity and Collective Rights -- 3.1 Australia -- 3.2 Nicaragua -- 3.3 Argentina -- 3.4 Kenya -- 3.5 South Africa -- 3.6 Paraguay -- 3.7 Botswana -- 3.8 India -- 3.9 Namibia -- 4 Indigenous People: Controlling Membership of a Community vis-a-vis Freedom of Association -- 5 Indigenous People: Meaning of Self-determination in International Law -- 5.1 Governance Rights -- 5.2 Policy Development Rights -- 5.3 Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 5.4 Legal Processes -- 5.5 General Policy Participatory Rights -- 6 Summary -- 3 Right to Be Consulted, but the Frustration of Being Ignored  The Ongoing Efforts in International Law to Give Practical Meaning to Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Consultation: From International Law Theory to Practical Guidelines for Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 2.1 Consultation Pursuant to  ilo  169 -- 2.2 Consultation Pursuant  undrip  -- 2.3 Standard-Setting Guidance by the Human Rights Committee; the Committee on Social, Economic and Cultural Rights; and the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination -- 2.3.1 Consultation Regarding Traditional Lands -- 2.3.2 Consultation as a Fundamental Human Right -- 2.3.3 Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 2.3.4 Access to Traditional Lands -- 2.3.5 Effective Participation in Decisions that Affect Them -- 2.3.6 Failure to Consult Implies Discrimination -- 2.3.7 Legal Mechanism to Resolve Disputes -- 2.3.8 Right to Be Consulted When Traditional Lands Affected -- 2.4 Good Faith Consultation Pursuant to the “Right to Negotiate” in Australia -- 2.4.1 Practical Meaning of “Good Faith” Negotiations -- 2.4.2 Examples of Behaviour that Does Not Indicate Lack of Good Faith -- 2.4.3 Concluding Observations about the Right to Negotiate -- 2.5 Difference between “in” Consultation and “after” Consultation in South Africa -- 3 Concluding Observations about the Duty to Consult with Indigenous People in International Law -- 4 Speaking, but Does Anyone Listen?  The Path of Progress and Frustration with Indigenous Advisory Bodies of the Sámi, Aboriginal People, and the Khoisan -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Australia: Why Is It So Difficult to Consult? -- 3 The Sámi Parliament of Finland: A “Parliament” in Name, but What about the “Obligation to Negotiate”? -- 4 The Khoisan: First Inhabitants of Southern Africa, but the Last in Consultancy Rights -- 5 Responses to the Four Questions about Indigenous Consultative Bodies -- 5.1 Question 1: Meaning of Consult in the Context of  fpic  -- 5.2 Question 2: Functional Areas for Consultation -- 5.3 Question 3: Composition of Indigenous Body -- 5.4 Question 4: Can Laws and Policy Decisions Be Legally Reviewed for Lack of Consultation? -- 5 Quotas in the Modern Era  The Reserved Māori Seats in New Zealand -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Relevance of the Māori-Seats to Contemporary Constitution Drafters -- 3 Background of the Māori -- 4 Background to the Māori Reserved Seats -- 5 Questions Arising from the Reserved Seats -- 5.1 How Is the Māori Defined? -- 5.2 How Is the Electoral List of the Māori Reserved Seats Put Together? -- 5.3 How Are Disputes about Registration of Māori Voters or Candidates Resolved? -- 5.4 Observations Drawn from the Māori Experience -- 6 Summary -- 6 Our Land, Our Life  Linking Self-determination to Land Restoration in the Case of the Makuleke Joint Management Agreement in the Kruger National Park -- 1 Introduction -- 2 International Law, Restoration of Rights to Land and Self-Determination -- 3 Background to Land Reform in South Africa and the Makuleke -- 4 Terms of the Makuleke Agreement -- 4.1 Setting the Scene -- 4.2 Status of the Land -- 4.3 Contractual National Park -- 4.4 Joint Management Board to Manage the Makuleke Region -- 4.5 Powers and Functions of the Joint Management Board -- 4.6 Responsibilities of SANParks -- 4.7 Transfer of Skills and Commercial Activities -- 4.8 Resource Use Rights -- 4.9 Income and Expenditure Related to the Makuleke Region -- 4.10 Examples of Projects by the Makuleke -- 4.10.1 Luxury Ecotourism Facilities -- 4.10.2 Anti-poaching Unit -- 4.10.3 General Tourism Activities outside the Kruger Park -- 4.10.4 Tourism Employment within the Makuleke Region -- 4.10.5 Concession Fees Payable to the Makuleke Community -- 4.10.6 Environmental Training of the Makuleke -- 4.10.7 Educational Standards of the Makuleke -- 4.10.8 Implementation Officer Employed by the Makuleke -- 4.10.9 Self-Governing Institutions of the Makuleke -- 4.10.10 Community Cohesion of the Makuleke -- 4.10.11 Distributing Benefits amongst the Makuleke -- 4.11 Resolution of Disagreements -- 5 Concluding Observations -- 7 Modernism versus Traditionalism  A Reflection on the Noken Electoral System of West Papua -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Background to the Political Use of Noken -- 3 Noken-System: Its Cultural Meaning and Political Use -- 4 Constitutional Court Recognition of Noken as Substitute for Popular Vote -- 5 Noken-Elections: The Aftermath of the 2009-Judgement -- 6 Concluding Observations -- 8 Going It Alone  Privatised, Cultural Self-Government for Afrikaners in South Africa: Insights from a Non-indigenous Community in Functional Self-Determination -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Context of Afrikaans Self-help Initiatives -- 3 Gauteng Education Bill-Case: The Basis for the Dogma That Funding of Equality, Trumps Funding of Diversity -- 4 Who Is the Afrikaans Community? -- 5 Opportunities for Self-Determination of Communities under the Constitution -- 5.1 Decentralisation to Provincial Government -- 5.2 Advisory Bodies – Underutilised Potential -- 5.3 Possible Cultural Council – Remaining Dormant -- 6 Language and Cultural Free Association and Parallel State-Like Structures -- 6.1 What, If Anything, Makes the Initiatives of the Afrikaans Community Unique? -- 6.2 Indicators of State Failures in Service Delivery Giving Rise to the Afrikaans Self-Do-Culture -- 6.3 Going It Alone: Functional Autonomy and Examples of Afrikaans Parallel State-Development -- 6.3.1 What is Functional Autonomy? -- 6.3.2 Examples of Afrikaans Functional Autonomy in Practice -- 7 Summary -- 9 Regaining What Has Been Lost  The Art of the Possible -- 1 Theme 1: Is It Feasible to Wait for a Lazarus-Moment? -- 2 Theme 2: Indigenous Rights: Caught between Idealism and Pragmatism -- 3 Theme 3: Are Indigenous Rights “Restored” or “Granted”? -- 4 Theme 4: How Are Indigenous Rights Secured? -- 5 Theme 5: Symbioses between International Law and Municipal Law -- 6 Theme 6: Why Are the Rights of Indigenous People Unique? -- 7 Theme 7: What Is the Practical Difference between Indigenous Rights and Other Ethnocultural Minority Rights? -- 8 Theme 8: Can Definitional Hurdles Be Overcome? -- 9 Theme 9: When Does a Claim Become a Right? -- 10 Theme 10: Universal Rights or State-Based Bundle of Rights? -- 11 Theme 11: Institutional Design – a Matter for Domestic Law -- 12 Theme 12: Free, Prior and Informed Consent – Ongoing Search for Meaning, Content and Enforcement -- 13 Theme 13: Do-It-for-Me-Government or Do-It-Yourself Functional Autonomy ( diy )? -- Bibliography -- Index.
Indigenous peoples (International law).
Indigenous peoples Legal status, laws, etc.
90-04-54565-4
Studies in Territorial and Cultural Diversity Governance ; 18.
language English
format eBook
author Villiers, Bertus de,
spellingShingle Villiers, Bertus de,
Indigenous Rights in the Modern Era : Regaining What Has Been Lost /
Studies in Territorial and Cultural Diversity Governance ;
Acknowledgements -- 1 Setting the Scene -- 2 Recognising Indigenous Sovereignty – Sort Of  Essential Principles in International Law to Operationalise the Right to Self-determination of Indigenous Peoples -- 1 Background -- 2 The Road in International Law to Collective Rights and Self-determination for Indigenous People -- 3 Indigenous People: Legal Entity and Collective Rights -- 3.1 Australia -- 3.2 Nicaragua -- 3.3 Argentina -- 3.4 Kenya -- 3.5 South Africa -- 3.6 Paraguay -- 3.7 Botswana -- 3.8 India -- 3.9 Namibia -- 4 Indigenous People: Controlling Membership of a Community vis-a-vis Freedom of Association -- 5 Indigenous People: Meaning of Self-determination in International Law -- 5.1 Governance Rights -- 5.2 Policy Development Rights -- 5.3 Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 5.4 Legal Processes -- 5.5 General Policy Participatory Rights -- 6 Summary -- 3 Right to Be Consulted, but the Frustration of Being Ignored  The Ongoing Efforts in International Law to Give Practical Meaning to Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Consultation: From International Law Theory to Practical Guidelines for Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 2.1 Consultation Pursuant to  ilo  169 -- 2.2 Consultation Pursuant  undrip  -- 2.3 Standard-Setting Guidance by the Human Rights Committee; the Committee on Social, Economic and Cultural Rights; and the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination -- 2.3.1 Consultation Regarding Traditional Lands -- 2.3.2 Consultation as a Fundamental Human Right -- 2.3.3 Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 2.3.4 Access to Traditional Lands -- 2.3.5 Effective Participation in Decisions that Affect Them -- 2.3.6 Failure to Consult Implies Discrimination -- 2.3.7 Legal Mechanism to Resolve Disputes -- 2.3.8 Right to Be Consulted When Traditional Lands Affected -- 2.4 Good Faith Consultation Pursuant to the “Right to Negotiate” in Australia -- 2.4.1 Practical Meaning of “Good Faith” Negotiations -- 2.4.2 Examples of Behaviour that Does Not Indicate Lack of Good Faith -- 2.4.3 Concluding Observations about the Right to Negotiate -- 2.5 Difference between “in” Consultation and “after” Consultation in South Africa -- 3 Concluding Observations about the Duty to Consult with Indigenous People in International Law -- 4 Speaking, but Does Anyone Listen?  The Path of Progress and Frustration with Indigenous Advisory Bodies of the Sámi, Aboriginal People, and the Khoisan -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Australia: Why Is It So Difficult to Consult? -- 3 The Sámi Parliament of Finland: A “Parliament” in Name, but What about the “Obligation to Negotiate”? -- 4 The Khoisan: First Inhabitants of Southern Africa, but the Last in Consultancy Rights -- 5 Responses to the Four Questions about Indigenous Consultative Bodies -- 5.1 Question 1: Meaning of Consult in the Context of  fpic  -- 5.2 Question 2: Functional Areas for Consultation -- 5.3 Question 3: Composition of Indigenous Body -- 5.4 Question 4: Can Laws and Policy Decisions Be Legally Reviewed for Lack of Consultation? -- 5 Quotas in the Modern Era  The Reserved Māori Seats in New Zealand -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Relevance of the Māori-Seats to Contemporary Constitution Drafters -- 3 Background of the Māori -- 4 Background to the Māori Reserved Seats -- 5 Questions Arising from the Reserved Seats -- 5.1 How Is the Māori Defined? -- 5.2 How Is the Electoral List of the Māori Reserved Seats Put Together? -- 5.3 How Are Disputes about Registration of Māori Voters or Candidates Resolved? -- 5.4 Observations Drawn from the Māori Experience -- 6 Summary -- 6 Our Land, Our Life  Linking Self-determination to Land Restoration in the Case of the Makuleke Joint Management Agreement in the Kruger National Park -- 1 Introduction -- 2 International Law, Restoration of Rights to Land and Self-Determination -- 3 Background to Land Reform in South Africa and the Makuleke -- 4 Terms of the Makuleke Agreement -- 4.1 Setting the Scene -- 4.2 Status of the Land -- 4.3 Contractual National Park -- 4.4 Joint Management Board to Manage the Makuleke Region -- 4.5 Powers and Functions of the Joint Management Board -- 4.6 Responsibilities of SANParks -- 4.7 Transfer of Skills and Commercial Activities -- 4.8 Resource Use Rights -- 4.9 Income and Expenditure Related to the Makuleke Region -- 4.10 Examples of Projects by the Makuleke -- 4.10.1 Luxury Ecotourism Facilities -- 4.10.2 Anti-poaching Unit -- 4.10.3 General Tourism Activities outside the Kruger Park -- 4.10.4 Tourism Employment within the Makuleke Region -- 4.10.5 Concession Fees Payable to the Makuleke Community -- 4.10.6 Environmental Training of the Makuleke -- 4.10.7 Educational Standards of the Makuleke -- 4.10.8 Implementation Officer Employed by the Makuleke -- 4.10.9 Self-Governing Institutions of the Makuleke -- 4.10.10 Community Cohesion of the Makuleke -- 4.10.11 Distributing Benefits amongst the Makuleke -- 4.11 Resolution of Disagreements -- 5 Concluding Observations -- 7 Modernism versus Traditionalism  A Reflection on the Noken Electoral System of West Papua -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Background to the Political Use of Noken -- 3 Noken-System: Its Cultural Meaning and Political Use -- 4 Constitutional Court Recognition of Noken as Substitute for Popular Vote -- 5 Noken-Elections: The Aftermath of the 2009-Judgement -- 6 Concluding Observations -- 8 Going It Alone  Privatised, Cultural Self-Government for Afrikaners in South Africa: Insights from a Non-indigenous Community in Functional Self-Determination -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Context of Afrikaans Self-help Initiatives -- 3 Gauteng Education Bill-Case: The Basis for the Dogma That Funding of Equality, Trumps Funding of Diversity -- 4 Who Is the Afrikaans Community? -- 5 Opportunities for Self-Determination of Communities under the Constitution -- 5.1 Decentralisation to Provincial Government -- 5.2 Advisory Bodies – Underutilised Potential -- 5.3 Possible Cultural Council – Remaining Dormant -- 6 Language and Cultural Free Association and Parallel State-Like Structures -- 6.1 What, If Anything, Makes the Initiatives of the Afrikaans Community Unique? -- 6.2 Indicators of State Failures in Service Delivery Giving Rise to the Afrikaans Self-Do-Culture -- 6.3 Going It Alone: Functional Autonomy and Examples of Afrikaans Parallel State-Development -- 6.3.1 What is Functional Autonomy? -- 6.3.2 Examples of Afrikaans Functional Autonomy in Practice -- 7 Summary -- 9 Regaining What Has Been Lost  The Art of the Possible -- 1 Theme 1: Is It Feasible to Wait for a Lazarus-Moment? -- 2 Theme 2: Indigenous Rights: Caught between Idealism and Pragmatism -- 3 Theme 3: Are Indigenous Rights “Restored” or “Granted”? -- 4 Theme 4: How Are Indigenous Rights Secured? -- 5 Theme 5: Symbioses between International Law and Municipal Law -- 6 Theme 6: Why Are the Rights of Indigenous People Unique? -- 7 Theme 7: What Is the Practical Difference between Indigenous Rights and Other Ethnocultural Minority Rights? -- 8 Theme 8: Can Definitional Hurdles Be Overcome? -- 9 Theme 9: When Does a Claim Become a Right? -- 10 Theme 10: Universal Rights or State-Based Bundle of Rights? -- 11 Theme 11: Institutional Design – a Matter for Domestic Law -- 12 Theme 12: Free, Prior and Informed Consent – Ongoing Search for Meaning, Content and Enforcement -- 13 Theme 13: Do-It-for-Me-Government or Do-It-Yourself Functional Autonomy ( diy )? -- Bibliography -- Index.
author_facet Villiers, Bertus de,
author_variant b d v bd bdv
author_role VerfasserIn
author_sort Villiers, Bertus de,
title Indigenous Rights in the Modern Era : Regaining What Has Been Lost /
title_sub Regaining What Has Been Lost /
title_full Indigenous Rights in the Modern Era : Regaining What Has Been Lost / Bertus de Villiers.
title_fullStr Indigenous Rights in the Modern Era : Regaining What Has Been Lost / Bertus de Villiers.
title_full_unstemmed Indigenous Rights in the Modern Era : Regaining What Has Been Lost / Bertus de Villiers.
title_auth Indigenous Rights in the Modern Era : Regaining What Has Been Lost /
title_alt Regaining What Has Been Lost
Acknowledgements -- 1 Setting the Scene -- 2 Recognising Indigenous Sovereignty – Sort Of  Essential Principles in International Law to Operationalise the Right to Self-determination of Indigenous Peoples -- 1 Background -- 2 The Road in International Law to Collective Rights and Self-determination for Indigenous People -- 3 Indigenous People: Legal Entity and Collective Rights -- 3.1 Australia -- 3.2 Nicaragua -- 3.3 Argentina -- 3.4 Kenya -- 3.5 South Africa -- 3.6 Paraguay -- 3.7 Botswana -- 3.8 India -- 3.9 Namibia -- 4 Indigenous People: Controlling Membership of a Community vis-a-vis Freedom of Association -- 5 Indigenous People: Meaning of Self-determination in International Law -- 5.1 Governance Rights -- 5.2 Policy Development Rights -- 5.3 Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 5.4 Legal Processes -- 5.5 General Policy Participatory Rights -- 6 Summary -- 3 Right to Be Consulted, but the Frustration of Being Ignored  The Ongoing Efforts in International Law to Give Practical Meaning to Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Consultation: From International Law Theory to Practical Guidelines for Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 2.1 Consultation Pursuant to  ilo  169 -- 2.2 Consultation Pursuant  undrip  -- 2.3 Standard-Setting Guidance by the Human Rights Committee; the Committee on Social, Economic and Cultural Rights; and the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination -- 2.3.1 Consultation Regarding Traditional Lands -- 2.3.2 Consultation as a Fundamental Human Right -- 2.3.3 Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 2.3.4 Access to Traditional Lands -- 2.3.5 Effective Participation in Decisions that Affect Them -- 2.3.6 Failure to Consult Implies Discrimination -- 2.3.7 Legal Mechanism to Resolve Disputes -- 2.3.8 Right to Be Consulted When Traditional Lands Affected -- 2.4 Good Faith Consultation Pursuant to the “Right to Negotiate” in Australia -- 2.4.1 Practical Meaning of “Good Faith” Negotiations -- 2.4.2 Examples of Behaviour that Does Not Indicate Lack of Good Faith -- 2.4.3 Concluding Observations about the Right to Negotiate -- 2.5 Difference between “in” Consultation and “after” Consultation in South Africa -- 3 Concluding Observations about the Duty to Consult with Indigenous People in International Law -- 4 Speaking, but Does Anyone Listen?  The Path of Progress and Frustration with Indigenous Advisory Bodies of the Sámi, Aboriginal People, and the Khoisan -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Australia: Why Is It So Difficult to Consult? -- 3 The Sámi Parliament of Finland: A “Parliament” in Name, but What about the “Obligation to Negotiate”? -- 4 The Khoisan: First Inhabitants of Southern Africa, but the Last in Consultancy Rights -- 5 Responses to the Four Questions about Indigenous Consultative Bodies -- 5.1 Question 1: Meaning of Consult in the Context of  fpic  -- 5.2 Question 2: Functional Areas for Consultation -- 5.3 Question 3: Composition of Indigenous Body -- 5.4 Question 4: Can Laws and Policy Decisions Be Legally Reviewed for Lack of Consultation? -- 5 Quotas in the Modern Era  The Reserved Māori Seats in New Zealand -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Relevance of the Māori-Seats to Contemporary Constitution Drafters -- 3 Background of the Māori -- 4 Background to the Māori Reserved Seats -- 5 Questions Arising from the Reserved Seats -- 5.1 How Is the Māori Defined? -- 5.2 How Is the Electoral List of the Māori Reserved Seats Put Together? -- 5.3 How Are Disputes about Registration of Māori Voters or Candidates Resolved? -- 5.4 Observations Drawn from the Māori Experience -- 6 Summary -- 6 Our Land, Our Life  Linking Self-determination to Land Restoration in the Case of the Makuleke Joint Management Agreement in the Kruger National Park -- 1 Introduction -- 2 International Law, Restoration of Rights to Land and Self-Determination -- 3 Background to Land Reform in South Africa and the Makuleke -- 4 Terms of the Makuleke Agreement -- 4.1 Setting the Scene -- 4.2 Status of the Land -- 4.3 Contractual National Park -- 4.4 Joint Management Board to Manage the Makuleke Region -- 4.5 Powers and Functions of the Joint Management Board -- 4.6 Responsibilities of SANParks -- 4.7 Transfer of Skills and Commercial Activities -- 4.8 Resource Use Rights -- 4.9 Income and Expenditure Related to the Makuleke Region -- 4.10 Examples of Projects by the Makuleke -- 4.10.1 Luxury Ecotourism Facilities -- 4.10.2 Anti-poaching Unit -- 4.10.3 General Tourism Activities outside the Kruger Park -- 4.10.4 Tourism Employment within the Makuleke Region -- 4.10.5 Concession Fees Payable to the Makuleke Community -- 4.10.6 Environmental Training of the Makuleke -- 4.10.7 Educational Standards of the Makuleke -- 4.10.8 Implementation Officer Employed by the Makuleke -- 4.10.9 Self-Governing Institutions of the Makuleke -- 4.10.10 Community Cohesion of the Makuleke -- 4.10.11 Distributing Benefits amongst the Makuleke -- 4.11 Resolution of Disagreements -- 5 Concluding Observations -- 7 Modernism versus Traditionalism  A Reflection on the Noken Electoral System of West Papua -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Background to the Political Use of Noken -- 3 Noken-System: Its Cultural Meaning and Political Use -- 4 Constitutional Court Recognition of Noken as Substitute for Popular Vote -- 5 Noken-Elections: The Aftermath of the 2009-Judgement -- 6 Concluding Observations -- 8 Going It Alone  Privatised, Cultural Self-Government for Afrikaners in South Africa: Insights from a Non-indigenous Community in Functional Self-Determination -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Context of Afrikaans Self-help Initiatives -- 3 Gauteng Education Bill-Case: The Basis for the Dogma That Funding of Equality, Trumps Funding of Diversity -- 4 Who Is the Afrikaans Community? -- 5 Opportunities for Self-Determination of Communities under the Constitution -- 5.1 Decentralisation to Provincial Government -- 5.2 Advisory Bodies – Underutilised Potential -- 5.3 Possible Cultural Council – Remaining Dormant -- 6 Language and Cultural Free Association and Parallel State-Like Structures -- 6.1 What, If Anything, Makes the Initiatives of the Afrikaans Community Unique? -- 6.2 Indicators of State Failures in Service Delivery Giving Rise to the Afrikaans Self-Do-Culture -- 6.3 Going It Alone: Functional Autonomy and Examples of Afrikaans Parallel State-Development -- 6.3.1 What is Functional Autonomy? -- 6.3.2 Examples of Afrikaans Functional Autonomy in Practice -- 7 Summary -- 9 Regaining What Has Been Lost  The Art of the Possible -- 1 Theme 1: Is It Feasible to Wait for a Lazarus-Moment? -- 2 Theme 2: Indigenous Rights: Caught between Idealism and Pragmatism -- 3 Theme 3: Are Indigenous Rights “Restored” or “Granted”? -- 4 Theme 4: How Are Indigenous Rights Secured? -- 5 Theme 5: Symbioses between International Law and Municipal Law -- 6 Theme 6: Why Are the Rights of Indigenous People Unique? -- 7 Theme 7: What Is the Practical Difference between Indigenous Rights and Other Ethnocultural Minority Rights? -- 8 Theme 8: Can Definitional Hurdles Be Overcome? -- 9 Theme 9: When Does a Claim Become a Right? -- 10 Theme 10: Universal Rights or State-Based Bundle of Rights? -- 11 Theme 11: Institutional Design – a Matter for Domestic Law -- 12 Theme 12: Free, Prior and Informed Consent – Ongoing Search for Meaning, Content and Enforcement -- 13 Theme 13: Do-It-for-Me-Government or Do-It-Yourself Functional Autonomy ( diy )? -- Bibliography -- Index.
title_new Indigenous Rights in the Modern Era :
title_sort indigenous rights in the modern era : regaining what has been lost /
series Studies in Territorial and Cultural Diversity Governance ;
series2 Studies in Territorial and Cultural Diversity Governance ;
publisher Brill | Nijhoff,
publishDate 2023
physical 1 online resource (469 pages) : illustrations.
edition 1st ed.
contents Acknowledgements -- 1 Setting the Scene -- 2 Recognising Indigenous Sovereignty – Sort Of  Essential Principles in International Law to Operationalise the Right to Self-determination of Indigenous Peoples -- 1 Background -- 2 The Road in International Law to Collective Rights and Self-determination for Indigenous People -- 3 Indigenous People: Legal Entity and Collective Rights -- 3.1 Australia -- 3.2 Nicaragua -- 3.3 Argentina -- 3.4 Kenya -- 3.5 South Africa -- 3.6 Paraguay -- 3.7 Botswana -- 3.8 India -- 3.9 Namibia -- 4 Indigenous People: Controlling Membership of a Community vis-a-vis Freedom of Association -- 5 Indigenous People: Meaning of Self-determination in International Law -- 5.1 Governance Rights -- 5.2 Policy Development Rights -- 5.3 Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 5.4 Legal Processes -- 5.5 General Policy Participatory Rights -- 6 Summary -- 3 Right to Be Consulted, but the Frustration of Being Ignored  The Ongoing Efforts in International Law to Give Practical Meaning to Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Consultation: From International Law Theory to Practical Guidelines for Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 2.1 Consultation Pursuant to  ilo  169 -- 2.2 Consultation Pursuant  undrip  -- 2.3 Standard-Setting Guidance by the Human Rights Committee; the Committee on Social, Economic and Cultural Rights; and the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination -- 2.3.1 Consultation Regarding Traditional Lands -- 2.3.2 Consultation as a Fundamental Human Right -- 2.3.3 Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 2.3.4 Access to Traditional Lands -- 2.3.5 Effective Participation in Decisions that Affect Them -- 2.3.6 Failure to Consult Implies Discrimination -- 2.3.7 Legal Mechanism to Resolve Disputes -- 2.3.8 Right to Be Consulted When Traditional Lands Affected -- 2.4 Good Faith Consultation Pursuant to the “Right to Negotiate” in Australia -- 2.4.1 Practical Meaning of “Good Faith” Negotiations -- 2.4.2 Examples of Behaviour that Does Not Indicate Lack of Good Faith -- 2.4.3 Concluding Observations about the Right to Negotiate -- 2.5 Difference between “in” Consultation and “after” Consultation in South Africa -- 3 Concluding Observations about the Duty to Consult with Indigenous People in International Law -- 4 Speaking, but Does Anyone Listen?  The Path of Progress and Frustration with Indigenous Advisory Bodies of the Sámi, Aboriginal People, and the Khoisan -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Australia: Why Is It So Difficult to Consult? -- 3 The Sámi Parliament of Finland: A “Parliament” in Name, but What about the “Obligation to Negotiate”? -- 4 The Khoisan: First Inhabitants of Southern Africa, but the Last in Consultancy Rights -- 5 Responses to the Four Questions about Indigenous Consultative Bodies -- 5.1 Question 1: Meaning of Consult in the Context of  fpic  -- 5.2 Question 2: Functional Areas for Consultation -- 5.3 Question 3: Composition of Indigenous Body -- 5.4 Question 4: Can Laws and Policy Decisions Be Legally Reviewed for Lack of Consultation? -- 5 Quotas in the Modern Era  The Reserved Māori Seats in New Zealand -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Relevance of the Māori-Seats to Contemporary Constitution Drafters -- 3 Background of the Māori -- 4 Background to the Māori Reserved Seats -- 5 Questions Arising from the Reserved Seats -- 5.1 How Is the Māori Defined? -- 5.2 How Is the Electoral List of the Māori Reserved Seats Put Together? -- 5.3 How Are Disputes about Registration of Māori Voters or Candidates Resolved? -- 5.4 Observations Drawn from the Māori Experience -- 6 Summary -- 6 Our Land, Our Life  Linking Self-determination to Land Restoration in the Case of the Makuleke Joint Management Agreement in the Kruger National Park -- 1 Introduction -- 2 International Law, Restoration of Rights to Land and Self-Determination -- 3 Background to Land Reform in South Africa and the Makuleke -- 4 Terms of the Makuleke Agreement -- 4.1 Setting the Scene -- 4.2 Status of the Land -- 4.3 Contractual National Park -- 4.4 Joint Management Board to Manage the Makuleke Region -- 4.5 Powers and Functions of the Joint Management Board -- 4.6 Responsibilities of SANParks -- 4.7 Transfer of Skills and Commercial Activities -- 4.8 Resource Use Rights -- 4.9 Income and Expenditure Related to the Makuleke Region -- 4.10 Examples of Projects by the Makuleke -- 4.10.1 Luxury Ecotourism Facilities -- 4.10.2 Anti-poaching Unit -- 4.10.3 General Tourism Activities outside the Kruger Park -- 4.10.4 Tourism Employment within the Makuleke Region -- 4.10.5 Concession Fees Payable to the Makuleke Community -- 4.10.6 Environmental Training of the Makuleke -- 4.10.7 Educational Standards of the Makuleke -- 4.10.8 Implementation Officer Employed by the Makuleke -- 4.10.9 Self-Governing Institutions of the Makuleke -- 4.10.10 Community Cohesion of the Makuleke -- 4.10.11 Distributing Benefits amongst the Makuleke -- 4.11 Resolution of Disagreements -- 5 Concluding Observations -- 7 Modernism versus Traditionalism  A Reflection on the Noken Electoral System of West Papua -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Background to the Political Use of Noken -- 3 Noken-System: Its Cultural Meaning and Political Use -- 4 Constitutional Court Recognition of Noken as Substitute for Popular Vote -- 5 Noken-Elections: The Aftermath of the 2009-Judgement -- 6 Concluding Observations -- 8 Going It Alone  Privatised, Cultural Self-Government for Afrikaners in South Africa: Insights from a Non-indigenous Community in Functional Self-Determination -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Context of Afrikaans Self-help Initiatives -- 3 Gauteng Education Bill-Case: The Basis for the Dogma That Funding of Equality, Trumps Funding of Diversity -- 4 Who Is the Afrikaans Community? -- 5 Opportunities for Self-Determination of Communities under the Constitution -- 5.1 Decentralisation to Provincial Government -- 5.2 Advisory Bodies – Underutilised Potential -- 5.3 Possible Cultural Council – Remaining Dormant -- 6 Language and Cultural Free Association and Parallel State-Like Structures -- 6.1 What, If Anything, Makes the Initiatives of the Afrikaans Community Unique? -- 6.2 Indicators of State Failures in Service Delivery Giving Rise to the Afrikaans Self-Do-Culture -- 6.3 Going It Alone: Functional Autonomy and Examples of Afrikaans Parallel State-Development -- 6.3.1 What is Functional Autonomy? -- 6.3.2 Examples of Afrikaans Functional Autonomy in Practice -- 7 Summary -- 9 Regaining What Has Been Lost  The Art of the Possible -- 1 Theme 1: Is It Feasible to Wait for a Lazarus-Moment? -- 2 Theme 2: Indigenous Rights: Caught between Idealism and Pragmatism -- 3 Theme 3: Are Indigenous Rights “Restored” or “Granted”? -- 4 Theme 4: How Are Indigenous Rights Secured? -- 5 Theme 5: Symbioses between International Law and Municipal Law -- 6 Theme 6: Why Are the Rights of Indigenous People Unique? -- 7 Theme 7: What Is the Practical Difference between Indigenous Rights and Other Ethnocultural Minority Rights? -- 8 Theme 8: Can Definitional Hurdles Be Overcome? -- 9 Theme 9: When Does a Claim Become a Right? -- 10 Theme 10: Universal Rights or State-Based Bundle of Rights? -- 11 Theme 11: Institutional Design – a Matter for Domestic Law -- 12 Theme 12: Free, Prior and Informed Consent – Ongoing Search for Meaning, Content and Enforcement -- 13 Theme 13: Do-It-for-Me-Government or Do-It-Yourself Functional Autonomy ( diy )? -- Bibliography -- Index.
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This book focuses on practical measures that have been implemented in states to give effect to free, prior and informed consent (FPIC); self-determination by indigenous people; special electoral measures to benefit indigenous people; and the role of advisory bodies to advocate for indigenous interests. In many comparative works there are often only scant or brief reference to some country-experiences, but in this book several case studies are explored in depth to promote a greater understanding of the self-determination arrangements that have been implemented. These case studies represent a form of glocalisation , whereby global principles are applied to find local solutions, and local solutions in turn inform greater clarity and specificity to global principles. At the end of each chapter key lessons that can be drawn from the respective case studies are identified in the hope that those may inform developments in other countries and in international law.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="546" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">English</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="504" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Includes bibliographical references and index.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="t">Acknowledgements -- 1 Setting the Scene -- 2 Recognising Indigenous Sovereignty – Sort Of  Essential Principles in International Law to Operationalise the Right to Self-determination of Indigenous Peoples -- 1 Background -- 2 The Road in International Law to Collective Rights and Self-determination for Indigenous People -- 3 Indigenous People: Legal Entity and Collective Rights -- 3.1 Australia -- 3.2 Nicaragua -- 3.3 Argentina -- 3.4 Kenya -- 3.5 South Africa -- 3.6 Paraguay -- 3.7 Botswana -- 3.8 India -- 3.9 Namibia -- 4 Indigenous People: Controlling Membership of a Community vis-a-vis Freedom of Association -- 5 Indigenous People: Meaning of Self-determination in International Law -- 5.1 Governance Rights -- 5.2 Policy Development Rights -- 5.3 Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 5.4 Legal Processes -- 5.5 General Policy Participatory Rights -- 6 Summary -- 3 Right to Be Consulted, but the Frustration of Being Ignored  The Ongoing Efforts in International Law to Give Practical Meaning to Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Consultation: From International Law Theory to Practical Guidelines for Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 2.1 Consultation Pursuant to  ilo  169 -- 2.2 Consultation Pursuant  undrip  -- 2.3 Standard-Setting Guidance by the Human Rights Committee; the Committee on Social, Economic and Cultural Rights; and the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination -- 2.3.1 Consultation Regarding Traditional Lands -- 2.3.2 Consultation as a Fundamental Human Right -- 2.3.3 Free, Prior and Informed Consent -- 2.3.4 Access to Traditional Lands -- 2.3.5 Effective Participation in Decisions that Affect Them -- 2.3.6 Failure to Consult Implies Discrimination -- 2.3.7 Legal Mechanism to Resolve Disputes -- 2.3.8 Right to Be Consulted When Traditional Lands Affected -- 2.4 Good Faith Consultation Pursuant to the “Right to Negotiate” in Australia -- 2.4.1 Practical Meaning of “Good Faith” Negotiations -- 2.4.2 Examples of Behaviour that Does Not Indicate Lack of Good Faith -- 2.4.3 Concluding Observations about the Right to Negotiate -- 2.5 Difference between “in” Consultation and “after” Consultation in South Africa -- 3 Concluding Observations about the Duty to Consult with Indigenous People in International Law -- 4 Speaking, but Does Anyone Listen?  The Path of Progress and Frustration with Indigenous Advisory Bodies of the Sámi, Aboriginal People, and the Khoisan -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Australia: Why Is It So Difficult to Consult? -- 3 The Sámi Parliament of Finland: A “Parliament” in Name, but What about the “Obligation to Negotiate”? -- 4 The Khoisan: First Inhabitants of Southern Africa, but the Last in Consultancy Rights -- 5 Responses to the Four Questions about Indigenous Consultative Bodies -- 5.1 Question 1: Meaning of Consult in the Context of  fpic  -- 5.2 Question 2: Functional Areas for Consultation -- 5.3 Question 3: Composition of Indigenous Body -- 5.4 Question 4: Can Laws and Policy Decisions Be Legally Reviewed for Lack of Consultation? -- 5 Quotas in the Modern Era  The Reserved Māori Seats in New Zealand -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Relevance of the Māori-Seats to Contemporary Constitution Drafters -- 3 Background of the Māori -- 4 Background to the Māori Reserved Seats -- 5 Questions Arising from the Reserved Seats -- 5.1 How Is the Māori Defined? 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