Showing 1 - 12 results of 12 for search '"Indigenous rights"', query time: 0.06s Refine Results
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    Scientometrics Approach to Advance Public Policy Within the Framework of Indigenous Peoples by Sujianto Sujianto, Habibie Dedi Kusuma, Putri Risky Arya, Adianto Adianto, As’ari Hasim, Putri Atika Ulfa, Gendroyono Gendroyono

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Within the context of public policy and Indigenous Peoples’ Rights, the application of scientometrics provides various insights, including publication analysis, policy impact prediction and Indigenous rights, collaboration analysis, policy trends and Indigenous rights analysis, and knowledge mapping in a more objective and reliable framework. …”
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    Muito além da mestiçagem: anti-racismo e diversidade cultural nos governos Lula by Sérgio Costa

    Published 2010-01-01
    “…However, advances in anti-racist politics are more evident than in the field of protection of indigenous rights. Often, indigenous issues - and above all their territorial rights - clashed with economic and political interests accommodated in the government and its parliamentary support causing moderation in Lula's position.…”
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    The Social Cartography of Chapiquiña: Revindicating Indigenous Territorial Rights in the Highlands of Arica, Chile by Joselin Leal Landeros, Alan Rodríguez Valdivia

    Published 2018-05-01
    “…This study attempts to demonstrate how methods of social cartography can serve as a political tool for the re-vindication of indigenous rights. This study employed methods of social cartography to map indigenous territorial knowledge in the indigenous community of Chapiquiña in northern Chile as a process of re-appropriation of ancestral territory. …”
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    Untapping the potential of Indigenous water jurisdiction: perspectives from Whanganui and Aotearoa New Zealand by Elizabeth Macpherson, Hayden Turoa

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…In this article we use a sociolegal method to draw out globally relevant lessons from the groundbreaking Whanganui River model about the potential for Western or settler-state law to support and uphold Indigenous rights and relationships in water. Our analysis confirms that enabling Indigenous water jurisdiction could hold the key to more sustainable and equitable futures, but it requires a long-term commitment from states and local communities to relationship brokering, power sharing, and trust building with Indigenous peoples.…”
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    Le Brésil et ses Indiens : une réconciliation impossible ? by François-Michel Le Tourneau

    Published 2017-09-01
    “…To that end, we first sketch a rapid history of how indigenous rights were considered throughout Brazilian history. …”
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    Le conflit du Tipnis et la Bolivie d’Evo Morales face à ses contradictions : analyse d’un conflit socio-environnemental by Laetitia Perrier-Bruslé

    Published 2012-01-01
    “…To international viewers, Evo Morales represents another way of development, respectful of indigenous rights and of the environment. To understand the paradox of his international and national stances, I will study how this socio-environmental conflict appeared and then I will focus on the geographical issues raised by the Tipnis road, at the global, regional and local scales. …”
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    ¿Una nación en bosquejos? Procesos de identificación aymara en Chile durante el periodo transicional, 1990-1993 by Cristina Oyarzo

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…This experience reinforced identification processes that gained renewed strength with the national democratic opening and the international recognition of indigenous rights. As a result, demands were better articulated and gained visibility in the public space, and thus, an incipient idea of an Aymara nation emerged. …”
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    Reinvestigating social vulnerability from the perspective of Critical Disaster Studies (CDS): directions, opportunities and challenges in Aotearoa disaster research by Shinya Uekusa, Matthew Wynyard, Steve Matthewman

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Greater attention to Indigenous Knowledge – Mātauranga Māori – and Indigenous institutions, such as marae and the myriad relationships and connections that such institutions support, might potentially play a crucial role in future disaster mitigation and response.Glossary of Māori words: Aotearoa: New Zealand; Awa: stream, River; Hapū: a division of people, Community; Iwi: tribe; Mātauranga Māori: Indigenous knowledge; Kāinga: home; Manaakitanga: respect and care for others; Marae: communal and sacred facility; Ōtautahi: Christchurch; Raupatu: conquest and confiscation; Rohe: home territory; Rongomau Taketake: Indigenous Rights Governance Partner; Tairāwhiti: Gisborne district; Te Kāhui Tika Tangata: Human Rights Commission; Te Tari Taiwhenua: Department of Internal Affairs; Te Tiriti: The Treaty (of Waitangi); Tiko; Poo; Tino rangatiratanga: self-determination; Tupuna: ancestor; Urupā, Cemetary; Whakapapa: descent, Geneaology, Lineage; Whakawhānaungatanga: the practice of establishing, Maintaining and nurturing relationships; Whenua: land…”
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    Towards culturally inclusive healthcare in Peru: Mapping epistemic concepts in contemporary Indigenous Amazonian medicine-Traditional healers' perspectives. by Ilana Berlowitz, Maria Amalia Pesantes, Cynthia Cárdenas Palacios, Chantal Martin-Soelch, Ursula Wolf, Caroline Maake

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Healthcare models that include Indigenous medicine and traditional healers present an important avenue for addressing such inequalities, as they increase cultural adequacy of services, healthcare access, and acknowledge Indigenous Rights for their perspectives to be represented in public healthcare. …”
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    International Laws Regulating Human Rights in Business Operations in Uganda: Issues and Challenges by Paul Atagamen Aidonojie, Tom Mulegi, Jufri Muwaffiq, Andrew Ikhayere Imiefoh, Antai Godswill Owoche

    Published 2024-11-01
    “…These in essence negate fair labor practices, and respect for cultural and indigenous rights in place of business. It was therefore concluded and recommended that for effective sustenance and protection of human rights in a business, there is a need for effective implementation and enforcement of those rights provided for by international laws. …”
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