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Indigenous Peoples in International Law
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Table of Contents

Introduction
Part I. DEVELOPMENTS OVER TIME
1: The Historical Context
2: Developments within the Modern Era of Human Rights
Part II. CONTEMPORARY INTERNATIONAL NORMS
3: Self-Determination: A Foundational Principle
4: Norms Elaborating the Elements of Self-Determination
5: The Duty of States to Implement International Norms
Part III. NORM IMPLEMENTATION AND INTERNATIONAL PROCEDURES
6: International Monitoring Procedures
7: International Complaint Procedures
Conclusion
Appendix: Selected Documents
Bibliography
Table of Principle Documents
Table of Cases
Index

About the Author

S. James Anaya is James J. Lenoir Professor of Human Rights Law and Policy at the University of Arizona, James E. Rogers College of Law, where he teaches and writes in the fields of international human rights, indigenous peoples' rights, and constitutional law. He has practiced law representing Native American peoples and organizations in matters before United States courts and international institutions.

Reviews

PRAISE FOR THE PREVIOUS EDITION:

"No human rights collection would be complete without this well-documented survey of an often-neglected area of international law."--American Society of International Law
"Anaya's distillation of the complex debate surrounding the content of the right to self-determination has a clarity that is often missing in discussions of the term....Anaya's presentation of the history, continuing struggles, and achievements of the indigienous rights movement is exemplary scholarship."--European Journal of International Law
"Deserves a readership well beyond those interested only in indigenous peoples. It is a fascinating study of the dramatic changes occurring in the doctrine of international law in our times."--American Journal of International Law
"...The scope, detail, and documentary rigor of [the book] make it an essential reference for future work in the field."-American Political Science Review
"James Anaya has done for indigenous people in international law what Felix Cohen did for Native Americans in the United States. He has brought clarity, understanding, and order to a field previously understood only in isolated bits and pieces.It will now be impossible to think about this topic without consideration of Professor Anaya's prodigious research and deeply analytical jurisprudential and pragmatic insights."--Rennard Strickland, Dean, Oklahoma City
University School of Law
"[P]rovides a thorough, insightful, and constructive analysis of the treatment of indigenous peoples in both historical and contemporary international law regimes. The book leaves the reader with a clearer understanding of the failures of international law in the past, as well as a sense of the potential of international law today."--Virginia Journal of International Law
"This book is particularly important for the readers who want a deeper understanding of how and why indigenous peoples are in their current condition 'relative to others in humanity'"--Human Rights & Human Welfare

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