Description: Please refer to the section BELOW (and NOT ABOVE) this line for the product details - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Title:Indigenous Peoples, Consent And Rights: Troubling SubjectsISBN13:9781032085159ISBN10:1032085150Author:Young, Stephen (Author)Description:Analysing How Indigenous Peoples Come To Be Identifiable As Bearers Of Human Rights, This Book Considers How Individuals And Communities Claim The Right Of Free, Prior And Informed Consent (Fpic) As Indigenous Peoples The Basic Notion Of Fpic Is That States Should Seek Indigenous Peoples' Consent Before Taking Actions That Will Have An Impact On Them, Their Territories Or Their Livelihoods Fpic Is An Important Development For Indigenous Peoples, Their Advocates And Supporters Because One Might Assume That, Where States Recognize It, Indigenous Peoples Will Have The Ability To Control How Non-Indigenous Laws And Actions Will Affect Them But Who Exactly Are The Indigenous Peoples That Are The Subjects Of This Discourse? This Book Argues That The Subject Status Of Indigenous Peoples Emerged Out Of International Law In The Late 1970S And Early 1980S Then, Through A Series Of Case Studies, It Considers How Self-Identifying Indigenous Peoples, Scholars, Un Institutions And Non-Government Organizations (Ngos) Dispersed That Subject-Status And Associated Rights Discourse Through International And National Legal Contexts It Shows That Those Who Claim International Human Rights As Indigenous Peoples Performatively Become Identifiable Subjects Of International Law - But Further Demonstrates That This Does Not, However, Provide Them With Control Over, Or Emancipation From, A State-Based Legal System Maintaining That The Discourse On Indigenous Peoples And International Law Itself Needs To Be Theoretically And Critically Re-Appraised, This Book Problematises The Subject-Status Of Those Who Claim Indigenous Peoples' Rights And The Role Of Scholars, Institutions, Ngos And Others In Producing That Subject-Status Squarely Addressing The Limitations Of International Human Rights Law, It Nevertheless Goes On To Provide A Conceptual Framework For Rethinking The Promise And Power Of Indigenous Peoples' Rights Original And Sophisticated, The Book Will Appeal To Scholars, Activists And Lawyers Involved With Indigenous Rights, As Well As Those With More General Interests In The Operation Of International Law Binding:Paperback, PaperbackPublisher:RoutledgePublication Date:2021-06-30Weight:0 lbsDimensions:Number of Pages:264Language:English
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Location: USA
End Time: 2024-11-22T04:16:52.000Z
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Book Title: Indigenous Peoples, Consent And Rights: Troubling Subjects
Item Length: 9.2in
Item Width: 6.1in
Author: Stephen Young
Publication Name: Indigenous Peoples, Consent and Rights : Troubling Subjects
Format: Trade Paperback
Language: English
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Group
Publication Year: 2021
Series: Indigenous Peoples and the Law Ser.
Type: Textbook
Item Weight: 14.1 Oz
Number of Pages: 276 Pages