31. | Hocking, Barabara Ann : Evaluating self-determination of indigenous people through political processes and territorial rights, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of monograph series Evaluating self-determination of indigenous people through political processes and territorial rights : the status of the Nordic Saami from an Australian perspective / Hocking, Barabara Ann REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: The Finnish yearbook of international law (FYBIL) : 2000 : vol. XI / Koskenniemi, M. (Ed.-in-Chief), p. 289-324. - Hague : Martinus Nijhoff Publ., 2003. ISBN 90-411-1792-X LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Norway / Sweden / Russian Federation / Finland / Australia / New Zealand / Canada NOTE (GENERAL): ICCPR-1-27;; ICESCR-1; GC-12 (ICCPR-1); ILO convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); |
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32. | Brooks, Roy L. : PART ONE : Reparations at the national and regional levels, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of monograph series PART ONE : Reparations at the national and regional levels : African American redress movement : the quest for atonement / Brooks, Roy L. REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: Human rights in development : yearbook 2001 : reparations : redressing past wrongs / Ulrich, G.; Krabbe-Boserup, L. (eds.) - (Nordic human rights publications), p. 13-32. - Hague : Kluwer Law, 2003. - ISSN 0801-8049 ISBN 90-411-2030-0 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / New Zealand / Isarel / Germany LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR |
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33. | Pentassuglia, Gaetano : State sovereignty, minorities and self-determination, 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial State sovereignty, minorities and self-determination : a comprehensive legal view / Pentassuglia, Gaetano REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): International journal on minority and group rights : vol. 9; no. 4., p. 303-324. - Hague : Kluwer law, 2002. - ISSN 1385-4879 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: New Zealand / Finland LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Aaland Islands NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter-55; Charter of Paris; Declaration on friendly relations; ICCPR-25; UDHR; CERD; Helsinki final act; ACHPR; Vienna declaration and programme of action; GC-23 (ICCPR-17); Declaration on the rights of minorities; ICCPR-OP; Framework convention for the protection of national minorities; Convention concerning the indigenous peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); |
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34. | Jentoft, Svein (ed.) : Indigenous peoples , 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Indigenous peoples : resource management and global rights / Jentoft, Svein (ed.) ; Minde, Henry ; Nilsen, Ragnar, ix, 315 p.. - Delft : Eburon Academic publ., 2003. ISBN 90-5166-978-X LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: the articles are still missing INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Norway / Canada / New Zealand / Finland / Nicaragua NOTE (MEETINGS): Special session on indigenous peoples, 7th circumpolar universities co-operation conference "When distance is a challenge", University of Tromso, [20010819-20010821], [C] NOTE (GENERAL): Convention on the protection and integration of indigenous and tribal populations (ILO convention no. 107); Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries; Convention on biological diversity; |
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35. | Indigenous peoples in urban areas , 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Indigenous peoples in urban areas / REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Indigenous affairs : no. 3-4., 70 p. . - Copenhagen : IWGIA, 2002. - ISSN 1024-3283 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Editorial: 1. Indigenous Peoples and Urbanisation, by Jens Dahl, director, IWGIA & Marianne Jensen, editor, Indigenous Affairs 2. AFRICA: The Living and working conditions of urban-based indigenous peoples, by Johnson ole Kaunga. 3. ASIA : Tribal Domestic Working Women in Delhi, India, by Samar Bosu Mullick. 4. The Situation of Poor Indigenous Peoples in Baguio City - the Philippines, by Geraldine Cacho and Joan Carling. 5. AMERICA: The Uncertain Future of the Embera of the Upper Sinú in Colombia, by by Fernando Castrillón Zapata, ONIC. 6. Ethnic Identity and Poverty: Indigenous Peoples in the Cities of Mexico, by Tania Carrasco. 7. Mapuche Migration, Identity and Community in Chile: From Utopia to Reality, by Alvaro Bello M. 8. ARCTIC: Urban Aboriginal Communities in Canada, by Christopher Reid. 9. Urban Inuit in Canda : A case from Montreal, By Nobuhiro Kishigami. 10. PACIFIC: Urban Maori in Aotearoa/New Zealand, By Kirsty Gover. INDEX WORDS:
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36. | Syme, Cameron : Colonisation, 2000 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Colonisation : the source of a presently enforceable fiduciary duty? / Syme, Cameron REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Australian indigenous law reporter : vol. 5; no. 4., p. 1-28. - St. Leonards, NSW, Australia : Prospect Pub., 2000. - ISSN 1323-7756 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / New Zealand |
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37. | Bird, Greta (ed.) : Majah : indigenous peoples and the law, 1996 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Majah : indigenous peoples and the law / Bird, Greta (ed.) ; Martin, Gary ; Nielsen, Jennifer, viii, 298 p.. - Annandale, NSW : The Federation Press, 1996 . ISBN 1-86287-197-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Nungas in the nineties, by Irene Watson. 2. Dentention torture, terror and the Australian state: Aboriginal people, criminal justice and neocolonialism, by Chris Cunneen. 3. British common law and colonised peoples: studies in Trinidad and Western Australia, by Jeannine Purdy. 4. The price of compromise: should Australia ratify ILO Convention 169?, by Lisa Strelein. 5. Keeping the colonisers honest: the implications of Recommendation 333, by Neil Löfgren. 6. Koori cultural heritage: reclaiming the past?, by Greta Bird. 7. Intellectual property and the "imaginary Aboriginal", by Shelley Wright. 8.Contents Te reo maori - te reo rangatira o aotearoa - te okeoke roa the Maori language - the chiefly language of Aotearoa - the long struggle, by Nin Tomas. 9. Deconstructing the Royal Commission into Aboriginal deaths in custody, by Mark Harris. 10. Five issues for the criminal law after Mabo, by Jenny Blokland and Martin Flynn. 11. The recognition of Aboriginality by Australian criminal law, by Stanley Yeo. 12. The incarceration of Aboriginal women, by Marie Brooks. 13. The Yorta Yorta struggle for justice continues, by Wayne Atkinson. Subject Indigenous peoples Australia Legal status, laws, etc. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; CAT; CERD; Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoeples in independent coutries; ICESCR; |
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38. | Battiste, Marie : Protecting indigenous knowledge and heritage, 2000 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Protecting indigenous knowledge and heritage : a global challenge / Battiste, Marie ; Henderson, James [Sakej] Youngblood - (Purich's aboriginal issues series), viii, 324 p.. - Saskatoon : Purich Pub., 2000. ISBN 189583015X LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: The lodge of indigenous knowledge in modern thought: 1. Eurocentrism and the European ethnographic tradition. 2. What is indigenous knowledge?. PART II : Towards an understanding of the rights of indigenous peoples to their knowledge and heritage: 3. The concept of indigenous heritage rights. 4. The importance of language for indigenous knowledge. 5. Decolonizing cognitive imperialism in education. 6. Religious paradoxes. 7. Paradigmatic thought in Eurocentric science. 8. Ethical issues in research. 9. Indigenous heritage and Eurocentric intellectual and cultural property rights. PART III : EXISTING LEGAL REGIMES AND INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE AND HERITAGE:. 10. The international intellectual and cultural property régime. 11. The Canadian constitutional régime. 12. The Canadian legislative régime. PART IV : THE NEED FOR LEGAL AND POLICY REFORMS TO PROTECT INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE AND HERITAGE:. 13. Rethinking intellectual and cultural property. 14. Current international reforms. 14. Enhancing indigenous knowledge and heritage in national law. 15. Canadian policy considerations. PART V : CONCLUSION. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICCPR; ICESCR; Kari-Oca declaration; Mataatua declaration; Convention on biological diversity; Convention to combat dersertification; CRC; |
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39. | Riley, Mary (ed.) : Indigenous intellectual property rights, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Indigenous intellectual property rights : legal obstacles and innovative solutions / Riley, Mary (ed.) - (Contemporary native American communites), xix, 393 p.. - Walnut Creek, CA : Altamira Press, 2004. ISBN 0-7591-0486-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: LEGAL OBSTACLES : CHAPTER 1: "As Long As the Grass Grows": Representing Indigenous Claims , by Tressa Berman. CHAPTER 2: Digital Vibes and Radio Waves in Indigenous Peru , by Bartholomew Dean. CHAPTER 3: Intellectual Property Protection and the Market for Alaska Native Arts and Crafts, by Julie Hollowell. CHAPTER 4: The Amerindian Rights Movement in Guyana and Its Influence , by Mary Riley. PART II: DEVELOPING INNOVATIVE SOLUTIONS : CHAPTER 5: Land, Tenure Systems, and Indigenous Intellectual Property Rights , by Catherine M. Tucker. CHAPTER 6: Benefit-Sharing Under the Convention on Biological Diversity , by Katy Moran. CHAPTER 7: Ownership of Indigenous Languages: A case study from Guatemala , by Judith M. Maxwell. PART III: ACCESS AND CONTROL : CHAPTER 8: Intellectual Property Rights and Indigenous Peoples Rights and Responsibilities, by Maui Solomon. CHAPTER 9: Biocolonialism and Isolates of Historic Interest , by Marie Annette Jaimes Guerrero. CHAPTER 10: Indigenous Knowledge and Traditional Plant Resources of the Secwepemc (Shuswap) Nation, by Kelly P. Bannister. CHAPTER 11: Intellectual Property Rights and Indigenous Cultural Heritage in Archaeology, by George P. Nicholas and Kelly P. Bannister. CHAPTER 12: Prior Informed Consent and Bioprospecting Research in Chiapas , by Elois Ann Berlin and Brent Berlin. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / Canada / France / Guatemala / Guyana / Honduras / India / Nigeria / North America / Paraguay / Peru / El Salvador / Suriname / USA LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Alaska NOTE (GENERAL): Convention on biological diversity; CRC; Draft declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; ICCPR; UDHR; UN declaration of linguistic rights; |
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40. | Cant, G. (ed.) : Discourses and silences, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Discourses and silences : indigenous peoples, risks and resistance / Cant, G. (ed.) ; Goodall, A. (ed.), x, 326 p.. - Christchurch, New Zealand : University of Canterbury, New Zealand, 2005. ISBN 0-473-10628-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Resisting encroachment and re-establishing identity:. The Alta case: national and international consequences (Henry Minde, Norway). Sámi reindeer management (Jan Åge Riseth, Norway). Paradigm shifts in Southern Sámi research (Åke Jünge, Norway). Globalisation from below: the revitalisation of a Coastal Sámi community (Torill Nyseth and Paul Pedersen, Norway). Traditional identities and contemporary perspectives:. Formalising Sámi land rights in Norway (Erling Berge). Sámi, citizenship and non-recognition in the EU (Rebecca Lawrence, Sweden). Hawaiian connection to the land (Katrina Oliveira, Hawai‘i). First Nations, parks and conservation:. Conservation and Indigenous rights in Australia and Sweden ( Michael Adams, Australia). Laponia II: Lapland‘s World Heritage Site? (Kristina Lasko, Sweden). Building wilderness: Te Urewera National Park (Chris Castagna, Hawai‘i). Nga-i Tahu involvement in Coastal Management of Akaroa Harbour (Sarah Hemmingsen, Australia). Shifting sands, shifting policies: Crown and Ma-ori in New Zealand:. Policy development in modern Aotearoa New Zealand (Anake Goodall). Nga-i Tahu in a contested post-colonial New Zealand (Garth Cant). 21st Century Crown confiscations: the Foreshore and Seabed Act (Angeline Greensill). Thinking globally, acting locally: international human rights and double standards? (Justine Inns). Sustaining resilient communities: Asian experiences:. Korean farmers building community networks (Cheong Ji Woong and Cheong Chija Kim). Participation in environmental management in Vietnam (Binh Vu Trong, Viet Nam. Fujian culture in Okinawa (Akiyoshi Takahashi and Li Guoqing). Hmong Gardeners cultivating knowledge, land and culture (Kathy De Master, Wisconsin). Community actions and educational initiatives:. Rural Aboriginal men and participatory action research (Yarrabah Men’s Health Group, Australia). Representations of Aboriginal people in Australian schools (Pat Cavanagh). Teaching Indigenous studies at the University of Tromsø (Per Klemetsen Hætta and Else Grete Broderstad, Norway). INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia, Norway, Sweden, New Zealand, Korea, Vietnam, Japan |
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41. | Whiting, Amanda (ed.) : Mixed blessings, 2006 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Mixed blessings : laws, religions and women's rights in the Asia-Pacific region / Whiting, Amanda (ed.) ; Evans, Carolyn - (Studies in religion, secular beliefs and human rights ; vol. 1), xvi, 284 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2006. - ISSN 1871-7829 ISBN ~978-90-04-15141-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: 1. Situating the Issues, Framing the Analysis Carolyn Evans and Amanda Whiting; 2. Sex or Sangha? Non-normative Gender Roles for Women in Thailand Lucinda Peach; 3.Women and Witchcraft: Positivist, Prelapsarian, and Post-Modern Judicial Interpretations in PNG Jean G. Zorn; 4. Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Women, Religion and Law in Solomon Islands Jennifer Corrin Care; 5. Women, Religion and the Law in Aotearoa /New Zealand: The Complexity of Accommodating Different Value Systems in Law Margaret Bedggood and Leah Whiu; 6. The Roman Catholic Church and the Rights of East Timorese Women Susan Harris Rimmer; 7. Muslim Women’s Political Struggle for Marriage Law Reform in Contemporary Indonesia Kathryn Robinson; 8. Islamisation, Modernity and the Re-positioning of women in Brunei Ann Black; 9. “She’s a Woman but She Acts Very Fast:” Women, Religion and Law in Singapore Li-ann Thio. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Aotearoa/New Zealand / Australia / China / Indonesia / Solomon Islands / Thailand / USA NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; CEDAW; ICCPR; |
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42. | Richardson, Benjamin J. (ed. by) : Indigenous peoples and the law, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Indigenous peoples and the law : comparative and critical perspectives / Richardson, Benjamin J. (ed. by) ; Imai, Shin ; McNeil, Kent - (Osgood readers ), xiii, 432 p.. - Oxford : Hart publ., 2009. ISBN 978-184113-795-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: 1. Indigenous Peoples and the Law—Historical, Comparative and Contextual Issues, by Benjamin J Richardson, Shin Imai, and Kent McNeil. Part 1: Sovereignty, Status and Self-Determination in Historical Perspective 2. Promise and Paradox: The Emergence of Indigenous Rights Law in Canada, by Mark D Walters. 3. The Dyadic Character of US Indian Law, by Benjamin J Richardson. 4. Australia: The White House with Lovely Dot Paintings whose Inhabitants have ‘Moved on’ from History?, by Jennifer Clarke. 5. The Ma–ori Encounter with Aotearoa: New Zealand’s Legal System, by Jacinta Ruru. 6. The Inter-American System and the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: Human Rights and the Realist Model, by James Hopkins. 7. Indigenous Peoples and International Law and Policy, by Claire Charters. Part 2: Contemporary Claims, Issues and Settlements 8. Indigenous Legal Theory: Some Initial Considerations, by Gordon Christie. 9. Aboriginal Discourse: Gender, Identity and Community, by Val Napoleon. 10. Judicial Treatment of Indigenous Land Rights in the Common Law World, by Kent McNeil. 11. Indigenous Self-Determination and the State, by Shin Imai. 12. Law of the Land—Recognition and Resurgence in Indigenous Law and Justice Systems, by Christine Zuni Cruz. 13. The Ties that Bind: Indigenous Peoples and Environmental Governance, by Benjamin J Richardson. 14. ADR Processes and Indigenous Rights: A Comparative Analysis of Australia, Canada and New Zealand, by Michael Coyle. Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / Canada / New Zealand NOTE (GENERAL): CRC; ICCPR; CEDAW; CERD; Declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; Convention on biological diversity;
URL http://www.hartpub.co.uk/books/details.asp?isbn=9781841137957 |
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43. | Sheehan, Rosemary (ed.) : Vulnerable children and the law, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Vulnerable children and the law : international evidence for improving child welfare, child protection and children's rights / Sheehan, Rosemary (ed.) ; Rhoades, Helen ; Stanley, Nicky, 368 p.. - London : Jessica Kingsley, 2012. ISBN 978-1-84905-868-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Introduction, by Rosemary Sheehan, Monash University, Australia, Helen Rhoades, University of Melbourne, Australia and Nicky Stanley, University of Central Lancashire, UK. PART 1. Children and citizenship:. 1. Children's rights: the effective implementation of rights and standards, by Deena Haydon, Queen's University, Belfast, UK. 2. Child protection in humanitarian emergencies, by Patrick O'Leary, University of Bath, UK and Jason Squire, Terres des hommes Foundation. 3. Children in the shadows: Child trafficking in the UK, by Christine Beddoe, ECPAT UK. 4. Child combatants, peace processes: Challenges of inclusion and exclusion, by Shelly L. Whitman, Dalhousie University, Canada. 5. Unaccompanied children as illegal immigrants in the United States, by Gladis E. Molina, Florence Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project (FIRRP), USA. 6. Protecting the rights of children in custody, by Una Convery and Linda Moore, University of Ulster, UK. PART 2. Indigenous and non-national children and vulnerability:. 7. The victimisation of indigenous children, by Suzanne Oliver, Northern Territory Stipendiary Magistrate, Australia. 8. Non-national children and vulnerability: The child protection context, by Goos Cardol, Zuyd University of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands. 9. Mana tamariki, takahi tamariki: Maori child pride, Maori child abuse, by Rawiri Taonui, University of Canterbury, New Zealand. 10. Indigenous human rights law and the needs of indigenous children, by Terri Libesman, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia. PART 3. Child welfare and family identity:. 11. High frequency parental contact for infants in care: whose rights are being served?, by Cathy Humphreys and Meredith Kiraly, University of Melbourne, Australia. 12. Maternal incest: Challenges for child protection, by Jackie Turton, University of Essex, UK. 13. Lost identities: denying children their family identity, by James Reid, University of Huddersfield, UK. 14. Should adoption be an option?, by Greg Kelly and Chaitali Das, Queen's University Belfast, UK. PART 4. Child welfare and legal intervention:. 15. Child protection family law: The Australian experience, by Lisa Young, Murdoch University, Australia. 16. The police role in identifying and responding to children experiencing domestic violence, by Nicky Stanley, Pam Miller, NSPCC, Helen Richardson-Foster, University of Sheffield, UK and Gill Thomson, University of Central Lancashire, UK. 17. Relocation of children in family law disputes, by Robert H. George, University of Oxford, UK. 18. Working with separated families, by Helen Rhoades. 19. Deciding the best interests of the child: Legal responses to child protection concerns, by Rosemary Sheehan. 20. Conclusion, by Rosemary Sheehan, Helen Rhoades and Nicky Stanley. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / New Zealand / Northern Ireland / Pakistan / Sierra Leone / Sri Lanka / United Kingdom / USA / Sudan NOTE (GENERAL): CRC; Lomé convention; |