The Rights of Indigenous Peoples: Closing a Gap in Global Governance (Global INSIGHTS)

By Global Governance

The Rights of Indigenous Peoples: Closing a Gap in Global Governance (Global INSIGHTS) - Global Governance
  • Release Date: 2005-01-01
  • Genre: Politics & Current Events

Description

The year 2004 marked the end of the first International Decade of the World's Indigenous People proclaimed by the General Assembly of the United Nations. Although the achievements of the decade are mixed, it capped a long struggle for the recognition of the rights of indigenous peoples (IPs) in the international system within the framework of the UN Human Rights Commission (HRC). (1) The UN recognizes indigenous peoples as having the following: priority with respect to the occupation and use of a specific territory; the voluntary perpetuation of cultural distinctiveness; self-identification, as well as recognition by others as a distinct collectivity; and an experience of subjugation, marginalization, dispossession, exclusion, or discrimination. In most instances, who are and who are not indigenous is fairly clear-cut, but there are borderline and ambiguous cases that may be controversial in some countries. The concern over the rights of IPs arises because of a history of systematic and persistent violations of their rights by states, public institutions, private corporations, and members of the dominant society. Formal interest in indigenous issues began in the early 1980s when the Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities decided to establish the Working Group on Indigenous Populations (WGIP). Its annual session is the occasion for several hundred representatives of indigenous organizations from around the world to meet, exchange information, get to know the UN system, and present their various human rights claims and demands to an international audience. The principal outcome of these debates has been the Draft Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which should have been adopted by the General Assembly before the end of the international decade. Even though this declaration, if adopted, would not be legally binding on states, government delegations have not been able to reach a consensus on the text. Indigenous organizations consider it to be an aspirational document that they hope is part of emerging international "customary law" regarding indigenous peoples. Frustrated at the slow progress on this draft declaration in the Human Rights Commission, several indigenous representatives staged a hunger strike at the UN Palais des Nations in Geneva in November 2004.