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The Un Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: A New Interpretative Approach

The Un Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: A New Interpretative Approach - Hardcover

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Availability:In StockContributor:Andrew EruetiPublish date:2022-02-22Pages:240
Language:EnglishPublisher:Oxford University PressISBN-13:9780190068301ISBN-10:190068302UPC:9780190068301Book Category:LawBook Subcategory:International, JurisprudenceSize:9.58 x 6.39 x 0.84 inchesWeight:1.2214Product ID:SC5VHQ956G
This book offers a distinctive approach to the key international instrument on indigenous rights, the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (Declaration) based on a new account of the political history of the international indigenous movement as it intersected with the Declaration's negotiation.

The current orthodoxy is to read the Declaration as containing human rights adapted to the indigenous situation. However, this reading does not do full justice to the complexity and diversity of indigenous peoples' participation in the Declaration negotiations. Instead, the book argues that the Declaration should be subject to a novel, mixed-model reading that views the Declaration as embodying two distinct normative strands that serve different types of indigenous peoples. Not only is this model supported by the Declaration's political history and legal argument, it provides a new and compelling theory of the bases of international indigenous rights while clarifying the vexed question of who qualifies as indigenous for the purposes of international law.
Language:EnglishPublisher:Oxford University PressISBN-13:9780190068301ISBN-10:190068302UPC:9780190068301Book Category:LawBook Subcategory:International, JurisprudenceSize:9.58 x 6.39 x 0.84 inchesWeight:1.2214Product ID:SC5VHQ956G
Andrew Erueti teaches and researches in the areas of constitutional law and comparative and international indigenous rights. He has typically combined his academic work with advocacy for the rights of Indigenous peoples at the domestic and international levels. From 2007 - 2013 he was Amnesty International's adviser on Indigenous rights in its head office London and then the UN-office in Geneva. He has advised Maori and indigenous peoples on claims to the Waitangi tribunal and human rights treaty bodies, including the UN CERD Committee and UN Human Rights Committee. In 2018, he was appointed to the New Zealand Royal Commission of Inquiry into Historical Abuse in State Care and in the Care of Faith-based Institutions.
Publisher: Oxford University Press

Contributor(s)

Andrew Erueti

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