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10 Rev. Eur. Comp. & Int'l Envtl. L. 1 (2001)

handle is hein.journals/reel10 and id is 1 raw text is: 


RECIEL 10 (1) 2001. ISSN 0962 8797


Indigenous Peoples, International Law and

                                     Sustainability



                              Benjamin J. Richardson


INTRODUCTION: INDIGENOUS
PEOPLES' ENVIRONMENTAL
ASPIRATIONS IN A 'POST-
COLONIAL' WORLD

Over the past half century a large body of international
environmental  law  and human   rights law has  mush-
roomed   which, until recently, said little regarding the
position of indigenous peoples.' Emerging  discussions
about  the  environmental  significance of indigenous
peoples  can be  located within the broader,  evolving
interest in the human   rights dimensions  of environ-
mental  policy.2 One of the manifestations of this inter-
est has been a focus on the concept  of 'environmental
justice', that is, equity in access to and use of environ-
mental  resources as well as arguments concerning  the
intrinsic value of nature.3 Environmental  justice for
indigenous  peoples may be interpreted as requiring, at
a minimum:   the recognition of ownership  of land and
other resources traditionally utilized; allowing for their
effective  participation  in  resource   management
decision-making; and  securing an equitable share of the
benefits  arising  from  the  use   of  environmental
resources. In respect of international law, the challenge
for indigenous  peoples  has been  to modify  existing
international treaties and instruments dealing with the


1 The question of defining indigenous peoples has dominated many
academic and policy-making discussions. Without wishing to rehearse
these lengthy debates, it is suggested that indigenous peoples are
preferably defined as culturally distinct groups traditionally regarded,
and self-defined, as descendants of the original inhabitants of areas
which they share a strong spiritual and economic attachment: see
further, United Nation's Working Group on Indigenous Peoples, Pre-
liminary Report on the Study of the Problem of Discrimination Against
Indigenous Populations, (UN Doc. E/CN.4/Sub.2/L.566, 1982). There
are estimated to be over 250 million tribal or indigenous peoples
worldwide spread over more than 70 countries: J. Burger, The Gaia
Atlas of First Peoples: A Future for the Indigenous World (Doubleday,
1990), at 18-19, 180-185.
2See  A.E. Boyle and M.R.  Anderson (eds), Human Rights
Approaches to Environmental Protection (Clarendon Press, 1996); D.
Shelton, 'Human Rights, Environmental Rights, and the Right to
Environment', 28 Stanford Journal of International Law (1991), 103.
3See K. Bosselmann and B.J. Richardson (eds), Environmental Jus-
tice and Market Mechanisms (Kluwer, 1999); A. Sachs, Eco-justice:
Linking Human Rights and the Environment (Worldwatch Institute,
1995).


environment,   or to  devise  new,  more  appropriate
instruments   that better  secure  the  environmental
objectives of their communities.

Recent  international standards  for the treatment  of
indigenous  peoples have converged  on the concept  of
self-determination.4 The emphasis  on indigenous  self-
determination  in relation to the environment raises the
problem   of how  special rights for one  segment   of
society can  be reconciled  with overarching  govern-
mental responsibilities to maintain environmental pro-
tection standards to ensure  that development  is sus-
tainable. Whether  indigenous  self-determination and
environmental   protection  are  mutually  reinforcing
depends  partly on what is meant by 'self-determination'
and  the nature  of indigenous  peoples' lifestyles and
environmental  practices. According to Cassese, only the
entire population  of an  existing state constitutes a
'people' with a right of self-determination, and distinct
populations  within a state merely have  the rights to
'internal' as against 'external' self-determination with-
out any right of secession.5 Many groups, however, con-
tinue to be engaged  in anti-colonial struggles, such as
the Tibetans,  Kurds  and Tamils,  and  generally only
those  entities that resemble  the modern   European
nation-state have been able to successfully participate
in the decolonization process.' Anaya rejects that self-
determination  should be  equated with  the decoloniz-
ation process, asserting that it is a right of all people,
capable of being exercised in a variety of contexts, that


4 See K. Bosselmann, 'The Right to Self-determination and Inter-
national Environmental Law: An Integrative Approach', 1 New Zealand
Journal of Environmental Law (1997), 1; D.B. Suagge and C.T. Ste-
arns, 'Indigenous Self-government, Environmental Protection and the
Consent of the Governed: A Tribal Environmental Review Process',
5 Colorado Journal of International Environmental Law and Policy
(1994), 59; P. Thornberry, 'Self-determination, Minorities, Human
Rights: A Review of International Instruments', 38:4 International and
Comparative Law Quarterly (1989), 867; R.W. Williams, 'Encounters
on the Frontiers of International Human Rights Law: Redefining The
Terms of Indigenous Peoples' Survival in the World', Duke Law Jour-
nal (1990), 660.
5A. Cassese, Self-determination of Peoples (Cambridge University
Press, 1995), at 57-62.
6 D. Otto, 'Subalternity and International Law: The Problems of Global
Community and the Incommensurability of Difference', 5 Society and
Legal Studies (1996), 337, at 343.


0 Blackwell Publishers Ltd. 2001, 108 Cowley Road, Oxford OX4 1JF, UK and 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148, USA.


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