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         We Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail
  1. Once We Were Hunters: A Journey with Africa's Indigenous People by Paul Weinberg, 2002-08-01

61. Indigenous Peoples And The Creation Of An Inclusive International Legal System
we indigenous peoples ourselves believe that they can stand side by side The African states said, “Look, we’ve been talking about it for two years.
http://www.cceia.org/viewMedia.php/prmTemplateID/8/prmID/4400
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John Scott is the Secretariat of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues at the Division for Social Policy and Development, DESA. Human Rights Initiative Program 03/10/2004 Column Rabbit-Proof Fence Whale Rider Journey to the Sun Marooned in Iraq ... The Official Story By Yesim Yemni
Indigenous Peoples and the Creation of an Inclusive International Legal System John Scott Edited transcript of remarks, 1/14/04 Carnegie Council Studies seminar (New York City).
Introduction
Remarks
Introduction
JOANNE BAUER : Welcome to the Carnegie Council. My name is Joanne Bauer and I’m the director of studies here and I also founded the Human Rights Initiative about ten years ago. The bulk of the work that we do is to produce a publication called Human Rights Dialogue , which is available for free download on the Council's Web site.
We’re currently in the midst of working on an issue on environmental rights, which has a great deal of overlap with our speaker today. And we also have an interest in pursuing cultural rights, which is a subject that is rather obscure to most people. The human rights community is becoming more and more conversant in human economic and social rights, as they have long been in civil and political rights, but cultural rights is still new territory.
Indigenous rights relate very closely to these two areas. Our guest, John Scott, focuses on a human rights-based approach to social justice for aboriginal and indigenous peoples. He has worked as a high school teacher, an aboriginal educational advisor, an indigenous policy officer, a university lecturer, and a senior manager at the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission. He has a particular interest in biodiversity and the protection of traditional knowledge.

62. Indigenous: To Capitalize Or Not
In the US, we invariably capitalize African American and Hispanic, I m not sure that indigenous peoples of the Americas give offense,
http://www.wame.org/indigenous.htm
WAME Listserve September 2, 2003-September 18, 2003
Indigenous: To Capitalize or Not
Adding a New "Flavor" to the Ethnic Issue
Indigenous: To Capitalize or Not
I would be grateful for advice on the accepted practice regarding capitalization of the word indigenous? Does it depend on the context? Samuel Vasikaran
Editor, The Clinical Biochemist Reviews , Australia
My 2 cents: if indigenous is being used in a generic sense (eg: ".... of Indigenous peoples when compared to immigrant populations...") then no capitalisation. If it being used as a shorthand or collective descriptor for a particular cultural group ("kidney disease in Indigenous Austalians is ...") then capitalisation as a mark of respect is appropriate. Indigenous people of different tribes or groupings often prefer to have that respect conferred via capitalisation. The same applies to "aboriginal" vs "Aboriginal". If anyone disagrees, then I invite them to consider not capitalising "greek" or "briton" or "japanese". Simon Chapman
Tobacco Control
Alice Landwehr
Managing Editor, the

63. African Indigenous Women: A Fall 2005 Speaking Tour | MADRE: An International Wo
African indigenous peoples generally distinguish themselves based on their Yet rarely do we have a chance to hear firsthand from African indigenous
http://www.madre.org/programs/pe/speakers_fall05.html
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African Indigenous Women: A Fall 2005 Speaking Tour
In late September, MADRE's Executive Director, Vivian Stromberg, will tour with two Indigenous Maasai and Samburu women from Kenya. Lucy Mulenkei, director of the Indigenous Information Network (IIN), and Rebecca Lolosoli, founder of Umoja Uaso Women's Group, will speak alongside Ms. Stromberg about the struggles of African Indigenous women at the local, national, and international level.
Related Materials
Issues such as globalization, sustainable development and the UN Millennium Development goals are the subject of debate in many academic communities. This is a chance to discuss these issues with African Indigenous women whose daily lives and political work reflect a community-based and human-rights centered approach to ensuring environmental sustainability, HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment, and confronting the debt burden facing countries in the Global South. In Kenya, as in the rest of Africa, the question of who is Indigenous can be a contentious one. Many outside actors, including governments, have a motivation to narrowly define Indigenous Peoples in an attempt to avoid struggles over land and self-determination. African Indigenous Peoples generally distinguish themselves based on their present-day position as Peoples who maintain traditional pastoral and/or nomadic cultures and, as a result, are marginalized by the dominant society. Indigenous women also face discrimination within their own communities. As those primarily responsible for preserving their Peoples' natural resources and traditional knowledge, however, Indigenous women hold the keys to combating poverty and creating strategies for sustainable development, both in their communities and beyond.

64. Indigenous Peoples Council On Biocolonialism
indigenous peoples Oppose National Geographic IBM Genetic Research Project and South africa, this project is certain to affect many indigenous peoples
http://www.ipcb.org/issues/human_genetics/htmls/geno_pr.html
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Press Release
Dated: April 13, 2005 - 12:01 am
Released by: Indigenous Peoples Council on Biocolonialism
Contact: Debra Harry (dharry@ipcb.org) or Le`a Kanehe (lkanehe@ipcb.org)
Tel: 001 (775) 574-0248
For more information contact:
Indigenous Peoples Council on Biocolonism ipcb@ipcb.org www.ipcb.org

65. Survival International
survivalinternational.org - we help tribal people defend their lives, SOUTH africa South africa s indigenous people condemn Bushman evictions
http://survival-international.org/news.php?id=21

66. Survival International
survivalinternational.org - we help tribal people defend their lives, South africa s highest court ruled that an indigenous people has both communal
http://survival-international.org/stories.php?id=54

67. Urgent Need To Improve The U.N. Standard-Setting Process On Indigenous Peoples’
of indigenous Resource Development (IOIRD), indigenous peoples of africa However, as indicated by many indigenous peoples at last year’s session of
http://www.gcc.ca/printable.php?id=29

68. SARPN - Land
indigenous peoples in territories subjected to European conquest dating from and cultural identity to indigenous peoples, the revolution in South africa
http://www.sarpn.org.za/documents/d0000186/index.php
Home Contact SARPN Site map Site search ... Document search Regional themes > Land Last update: 2005-09-23
Land Rights Movements
Daniel W. Bromley - University of Wisconsin-Madison
E-mail: bromley@aae.wisc.edu
Posted with permission of Professor Daniel Bromley Printer friendly version < 1min (4 pages) Share with a friend
Indigenous peoples in territories subjected to European conquest dating from the late 15th century onward have managed to focus national and international attention on their subjugation and dispossession. These various movements, primarily concentrated in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South America, and the United States, began in different places at different times over the past several decades.
In New Zealand there was a single treaty between the British Crown and the Maori peoples. The Treaty of Waitangi, signed by the ranking British officer in New Zealand and 500 different Maori chiefs during 1840, became the primary instrument of dispossession of Maori. The Australian immigrants from England saw no reason for treaties since the Aborigines were assumed not to have title to the lands taken from them. In North America, the governments of Canada and the United States negotiated a large number of separate treaties with the many distinct Indian tribes as the Europeans flooded in. Some of these treaties entailed the payment of nominal sums of money for land and other assets. As in New Zealand, the North American treaties were not based on the existence of native title but arose, instead, from the presumption of possession.

69. African-Native Americans : We Are Still Here : A Photo Exhibit : Exhibit Page
The European term for indigenous peoples all over the world was Indians from AFRICANNATIVE AMERICANS we ARE STILL HERE is based on an exhibit,
http://newman.baruch.cuny.edu/digital/native/native_thumbs.htm
E X H I B I T
Rainmaker, Lenape /
Munsee
Winter Flower,
Ramapo
Many people believe racial and ethnic groups in North America have always lived as separately as they do now. However, segregation was neither practical nor preferable when people who were not native to this continent began arriving here. Europeans needed Indians as guides, trade partners and military allies. They needed Africans to tend their crops and to build an infrastructure.
Paw Paw
Moonfire, Seminole
Paw Paw, Carnarsie
Later, as the new American government began to thrive, laws were drafted to protect the land and property the colonists had acquired. These laws strengthened the powers of slave owners, limited the rights of free Africans and barred most Indian rights altogether. Today, black, white and red Americans still feel the aftershock of those laws. In order to enforce the new laws, Indians and Africans had to be distinguished from Europeans. Government census takers began visiting Indian communities east of the Mississippi River in the late 1700s and continued their task of identifying, categorizing, and counting individuals and "tribes" well into the 20th century. In the earlier days of this process, Native American communities that were found to be harboring escaped African slaves were threatened with loss of their tribal status, thereby nullifying their treaties with the U.S. government and relinquishing all claims to their land.

70. Wired News: We Ain't No Biocolonialists
I think if those involved in (the indigenous peoples Council) really understood what we re trying to do, they would not object to it, even if they might
http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,67289,00.html
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We Ain't No Biocolonialists
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By Stephen Leahy Also by this reporter 02:00 AM Apr. 21, 2005 PT National Geographic's recently announced Genographic Project hopes to trace human migration from Africa 60,000 years ago by analyzing the DNA from indigenous populations. At least one native organization, the Indigenous Peoples Council on Biocolonialism , proposes to boycott the project and its sponsors. (See Testing Blood to Track History
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71. UNITED NATIONS E/CN.17/2002/PC.2/6/Add.3
we indigenous peoples say that we are related to this life; thus your resources are our Even the African Commission on Human and peoples Rights,
http://www.ifg.org/wssd/indigenous.htm
UNITED NATIONS E/CN.17/2002/PC.2/6/Add.3
ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COUNCIL
Dist.: General
Date:
Original: English
Commission on Sustainable Development acting as
The preparatory committee for the
World Summit on Sustainable Development
Second Preparatory Session
28 January - 8 February 2002
Multi-Stake Holder Dialogue Segment of the Second Preparatory Session
Note by the Secretary-General
Addendum No. 3:
Dialogue Paper by Indigenous People
We came seeking justice on our homelands. We came here to appeal to the world at large to support our efforts to seek equitable solutions to discrimination, exploitation, racism, ethnocide and genocide of Indigenous Nations and Peoples ...
We came here to speak on behalf of the natural world being plundered by governments and corporations. We spoke on behalf of rooted trees that could not flee the chainsaw. We spoke on behalf of salmon, herring, tuna and haddock killed in their spawning beds. We had alarming news from the Four Directions about fish, wildlife and birds, contaminated, sick and disappearing. And today we continue to speak on their behalf. Today they are more endangered than ever, and if anything, their conditions are worse. In these times, humanity must work together, not just for survival, but for quality of life based on universal values that protect the delicate inter-relatedness of life that protects us all. ...Biodiversity is a clinical, technical term for this intricate inter-weaving of life that sustains us. We indigenous peoples say that we are related to this life; thus your "resources" are our relations. It is all in how you look at it.

72. ETHNIC DIVERSITY IN MEXICO - In Mexico Connect - The Site And The Magazine
THE indigenous peoples OF CHIHUAHUA A Story of War and Assimilation we begin with the Chinese, African and Jewish immigration, and over time,
http://www.mexconnect.com/mex_/feature/ethnic/ethnicindex.html

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    Ethnic Diversity In Mexico
    M éxico is an ethnically diverse country. To understand México, one must understand her peoples, their history and contributions to what is the México of today. Within this section, we consider those who lived here prior to the 14th century as Indigenous Peoples - Toltec, Olmeca, Zapotec
  • 73. Biodiversity And Health: Are We Killing The Plants That Can Cure?: International
    In Reports magazine Recognition and Respect for African Traditional we need a set of incentives to help indigenous peoples, to ensure that they receive
    http://www.idrc.ca/en/ev-55581-201-1-DO_TOPIC.html
    Español Français idrc.ca HOME IDRC ... Features Topic Explorer Reports magazine
    About
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    People Jennifer McCue
    ID:
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    Biodiversity and Health: Are we killing the plants that can cure?
    Related sidebar: A Cure by Any Other Name Related articles: In Reports magazine: Recognition and Respect for African Traditional Medicine , by Bob Stanley In Reports magazine: Medicinal Plant Potential and Profits in Latin America , by Bob Stanley Links to explore… IDRC Program Initiative: Sustainable Use of Biodiversity ( SUB The Global Network on Medicinal Plants (MedPlants) Web site The Tropical Conservancy Web site The International Symposium on Biodiversity and Health Web site The TRAMIL Web site The Convention on Biological Diversity Web site Return to Focus on Medicinal Plants About Reports Email notification In developing countries, traditional herbal remedies are often the first line of health care for most of the population. ( IDRC Photo: Daniel Buckles)
    Bob Stanley
    While the trend may be new, most of these “alternative medicines” are not. (See related sidebar: A Cure by Any Other Name ) These are your grandparent’s cures. Some are effective, some are not. Most, though not all, are at least harmless. Recent research suggests, however, that plant-based medicines — phytomedicines — may be the key to curing some of the world’s most serious diseases, possibly even AIDS (see related article:

    74. ENVIRONMENT-VENEZUELA: Indigenous Peoples Protest Coal Mining
    indigenous peoples Protest Coal Mining Humberto Márquez CARACAS, Apr 4 (IPS) Bare-chested, we are the guardians of the Sierra,” he declared to IPS.
    http://www.ipsnews.net/new_nota.asp?idnews=28150

    75. The Rainforest Foundation -
    Congolese human rights and indigenous peoples groups will be spending eighteen law in Central africa specifically addressing indigenous forest peoples
    http://www.rainforestfoundationuk.org/fcpage.php?fcpage=News&offset=6

    76. IRIN Africa Central East Africa GREAT LAKES GREAT LAKES
    the plight of the indigenous forest peoples, or pygmies, of Central africa. Kalimba Zephyrin, the director of the Community of indigenous People of
    http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=2645&SelectRegion=Central_East_Afric

    77. Canku Luta - Red Road
    we, indigenous peoples delegates from different countries, undertake this action, indigenous peoples African Coordinating Committee (IPACC) Argentina
    http://www.canku-luta.org/
    Cankú Lúta (Red Road, Inc.)
    Cankú Lúta, a national 501(c)3 nonprofit organization founded by Tokalas, is committed to education, service, and preservation of American Indian Culture. HOW TO HELP
    Make a Tax- Deductible Donation
    As a Grassroots organization, we depend on donations from individuals and other small organizations.
    Food Drives Why We Do Food Drives
    Past Food Drives

    Organize a Food Drive

    Support Our Soup Kitchen
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    Support Treaty Elders of the Lakota Nation's Trip to Washington D.C

    Grassroots Self-Sufficiency Initiative Donate Fabric, Art Supplies, Seeds, Equipment....more
    Donate a Truck, Trailer or Van

    Auctions
    To hear a message in Lakota from Ken Cane click here HUNGER STRIKE BY INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' REPRESENTATIVES AT THE UNITED NATIONS! Today, November 29th, 2004, at 11 am, we, Indigenous Peoples' delegates, declare a hunger strike and spiritual fast inside the United Nations Palais des Nations in Geneva, during this 3rd week of the 10th session of the Intersessional Working Group on the United Nations Draft Declaration for the Rights on Indigenous Peoples. We, Indigenous peoples' delegates from different countries, undertake this action, with the support and solidarity of Indigenous Peoples and organizations from around the world, to call the world's attention to the continued attempts by some states, as well as this UN process itself, to weaken and undermine the Draft Declaration developed in the UN Working Group on Indigenous Populations and adopted by the UN Subcommission for the Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities in 1994.

    78. Discrimination Against Indigenous Peoples And Americans Of African Descent
    Discrimination against indigenous peoples and Americans of African descent indigenous people,. we must begin to respect their ..territories,
    http://www.shjolg.com/page52.htm
    "Reflections" regarding THE PATH TO SOLIDARITY
    (continued) Prayer "Come Spirit of Love! Come that as a result of our CONVERSION
    AND
    COMMUNION,
    a complete unity of all the peoples
    on this great CONTINENT OF AMERICA
    may take place! That beginning with
    The CHURCH IN AMERICA
    a
    SOLIDARITY,
    never before seen on the face of this earth may result! Discrimination against indigenous peoples and Americans of African descent
    Our Lady, THE WOMAN CLOTHED WITH THE SUN AND THE MOON UNDER HER FEET came as THE MOTHER OF ALL PEOPLES! WE MUST ASK OURSELVES THIS VERY IMPORTANT QUESTION How can we be true representatives of Christ's Love if we treat others with less than the Love of Christ? In order for the CHURCH IN AMERICA to be faithful to the Gospel of Christ

    79. ASGW - Principles For Diversity-Competent Group Workers
    As members of ASGW, we need to increase our awareness of our own biases, status of various group members (such as indigenous peoples, African Americans,
    http://www.asgw.org/diversity.htm
    Association for Specialists in Group Work Principles for Diversity-Competent Group Workers Approved by the Executive Board, August 1, 1998
    Prepared by Lynn Haley-Bañez, Sherlon Brown, and Bogusia Molina
    Consultants: Michael D’Andrea, Patricia Arrendondo,
    Niloufer Merchant, and Sandra Wathen Preamble
    The Association for Specialists in Group Work (ASGW) is committed to understanding how issues of diversity affect all aspects of group work. This includes but is not limited to: training diversity-competent group workers; conducting research that will add to the literature on group work with diverse populations; understanding how diversity affects group process and dynamics; and assisting group facilitators in various settings to increase their awareness, knowledge, and skills as they relate to facilitating groups with diverse memberships. As an organization, ASGW has endorsed this document with the recognition that issues of diversity affect group process and dynamics, group facilitation, training, and research. As an organization, we recognize that racism, classism, sexism, heterosexism, ableism, and so forth, affect everyone. As individual members of this organization, it is our personal responsibility to address these issues through awareness, knowledge, and skills. As members of ASGW, we need to increase our awareness of our own biases, values, and beliefs and how they impact the groups we run. We need to increase our awareness of our group members’ biases, values, and beliefs and how they also impact and influence group process and dynamics. Finally, we need to increase our knowledge in facilitating, with confidence, competence, and integrity, groups that are diverse on many dimensions.

    80. Return To Education Supplement ContentsRainforest Information Centre Educational
    The Pygmies of Central africa 6. indigenous People and Rainforest Protection we shall now introduce you to some of these rainforest cultures from around
    http://www.rainforestinfo.org.au/background/people.htm
    Return to Education Supplement Contents
    Rainforest Information Centre Educational Supplement INDIGENOUS PEOPLE OF THE RAINFOREST "Miners going into the mines often used to carry small birds, such as canaries, which were highly sensitive to the buildup of toxic gases. If the birds died, the miners quickly fled. Today, the world's 500 million indigenous peoples are the miners' canary; and the Earth particularly the tropical rainforests is the mine.That the canary is dying is a warning that the dominant cultures of the world have become toxic to the Earth. In this case, however, we cannot flee the mine."
    Jason W. Clay in "Lessons of the Rainforest" Contents 1. Introduction
    2. The Penan of Sarawak
    3. The Yanomami of Brazil
    4. The Kuku-Yalanji of North East Queensland, Australia
    5. The Pygmies of Central Africa
    6. Indigenous People and Rainforest Protection
    6.1 The Desana of Colombia
    6.2 Colombia: Tribes Get Half of Amazon
    7. More Rainforest Facts Recommended Reading 1. Introduction

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