Journal article

Settler-state political theory, 'CANZUS' and the UN declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples

K Gover

European Journal of International Law | OXFORD UNIV PRESS | Published : 2015

Abstract

When the UN General Assembly voted in 2007 to adopt the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), only Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the USA cast negative votes. This article argues that the embedding of indigenous jurisdictions in the constitutional orders of these states via negotiated political agreements limits their capacity to accept certain provisions of the UNDRIP. Once the agreement-making process is set in motion, rights that do not derive from those bargains threaten to undermine them. This is especially true of self-governance and collective property rights, which are corporate rights vested to historically continuous indigenous groups. Since these rights can..

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University of Melbourne Researchers