Indigenous peoples land rights: A culturally sensitive strategy for poverty eradication and sustainable development

Fuentes, Alejandro (2021-03-23). Indigenous peoples land rights: A culturally sensitive strategy for poverty eradication and sustainable development In . Kjaerum, Morten (Ed.). Research Handbook on Human Rights and Poverty, 323 - 336: Edward Elgar Publishing
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DOI:
Book Chapter | Published | English
Authors:
Fuentes, Alejandro
Editors:
Kjaerum, Morten
Department:
Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law
Abstract:
In Latin-America -as in most parts of the world- indigenous peoples are ‘the poorest of the poor, and the most excluded of the excluded’. Poverty goes hand in hand with their situation of vulnerability, exclusion and disempowerment. How can this situation be changed? How to find adequate frameworks able to facilitate the overturn of their structural disenfranchisement? Departing from the jurisprudence developed by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACrtHR), this paper argues that the recognition of indigenous peoples’ right to collective property over their traditional lands and natural resources constitutes the most adequate strategy for poverty reduction that takes into consideration their own cultural distinctiveness. In fact, indigenous peoples’ special connection with their lands and territories is essential for both their material and cultural survival. Without access to their lands and natural resources, indigenous peoples are not only condemned to structural poverty conditions but they are also deprived of the necessary conditions for a life in dignity, that is, a life that takes into consideration their own world’s views and cultural understandings. In other words, in the case of indigenous peoples, the recognition and effective realization of their land rights constitutes the most effective strategy for reducing and ending their structural condition of poverty but also for guaranteeing their societal inclusion and cultural empowerment. Finally yet importantly, the effective recognition of indigenous peoples’ land rights could also be understood as a culturally sensitive approach to the realization of the UN 2030 Agenda and the achievement of Sustainable Development Goal 1 (End poverty in all its forms everywhere) that takes into consideration and respects their cultural diversity
Keywords:
Human rights ; Poverty ; Equality of opportunities ; Mänskliga rättigheter
ISBN:
9781788977500
LUP-ID:
d6625595-7e98-46da-b52f-d92be5740db3 | Link: https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/d6625595-7e98-46da-b52f-d92be5740db3 | Statistics

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