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    Indigenous People, Human Rights, and the African Problem: The Case of the Twa, Ogiek and Maasai

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    Kakungulu_Mayambala_R.pdf
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    Description:
    Dissertation
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    Author
    Kakungulu-Mayambala, Ronald
    Advisor
    Williams, Robert
    Issue Date
    2010-04
    Keywords
    Human rights -- Africa
    Indigenous peoples -- Africa -- Economic conditions
    Customary law -- Africa
    Land tenure -- Africa
    Land use, Rural -- Government policy -- Africa
    
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    Rights
    Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the James E. Rogers College of Law and the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction, presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author.
    Collection Information
    This item is part of the IPLP Dissertations collection. For more information about the collection or the program, please contact Justin Boro, UA College of Law, justinboro1986@email.arizona.edu.
    Publisher
    The University of Arizona.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10150/631500
    Abstract
    This article examines indigenous peoples' human rights and the African problem through the lens of the Twa, Ogiek and Maasai of Eastern Africa. The article argues that the whole issue of indigenous peoples' rights, which has received so much attention over the last three decades, has been insufficiently problematized in Africa. After setting the stage, the article looks at how some of the problems of applying indigenous peoples' rights in Africa have been handled. In the framework of case studies, it focuses on some absolutely horrible decisions made in Africa regarding peoples that could arguably be covered by recent developments in international law involving indigenous peoples and analyzes why these developing international human rights principle standards and declarations for indigenous people have not been applied by the courts in Africa. It concludes that in order to reverse the above trend, something needs to be done: we need to educate the judges, law students, legislators, and other stakeholders about indigenous peoples rights so as to get the institutions of African governments to realize how important it is.
    Type
    text
    Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic)
    Language
    en_US
    Collections
    Indigenous Peoples Law and Policy Program (IPLP) Dissertations

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