Friday, May 24, 2019

New Issue: International Journal of Human Rights

The latest issue of the International Journal of Human Rights (Vol. 23, nos. 1-2, 2019) is out. Contents include:
  • Special Issue: The Tenth Anniversary of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
    • Jessie Hohmann, Introduction
    • Felipe Gómez Isa, The UNDRIP: an increasingly robust legal parameter
    • Julian Burger, After the Declaration: next steps for the protection of indigenous peoples’ rights
    • Dorothée Cambou, The UNDRIP and the legal significance of the right of indigenous peoples to self-determination: a human rights approach with a multidimensional perspective
    • Federico Lenzerini, Implementation of the UNDRIP around the world: achievements and future perspectives. The outcome of the work of the ILA Committee on the Implementation of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
    • Corinne Lewis & Carl Söderbergh, The World Bank’s new Environmental and Social Framework: some progress but many gaps regarding the rights of indigenous peoples
    • Malayna Raftopoulos & Damien Short, Implementing free prior and informed consent: the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (2007), the challenges of REDD+ and the case for the precautionary principle
    • Jérémie Gilbert & Corinne Lennox, Towards new development paradigms: the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples as a tool to support self-determined development
    • Noelle Higgins, Creating a space for indigenous rights: the Universal Periodic Review as a mechanism for promoting the rights of indigenous peoples
    • Adriana Giunta, Looking back to move forward: the status of environmental rights under the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
    • Harry Hobbs, Treaty making and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: lessons from emerging negotiations in Australia
    • Stephen M. Young, The self divided: the problems of contradictory claims to Indigenous peoples’ self-determination in Australia
    • Jeremy Patzer, Indigenous rights and the legal politics of Canadian coloniality: what is happening to free, prior and informed consent in Canada?
    • Amelia Alva-Arévalo, A critical evaluation of the domestic standards of the right to prior consultation under the UNDRIP: lessons from the Peruvian case
    • Fumiya Nagai, Implementing the rights of indigenous peoples in Japan: implications and challenges of forest certification for the Ainu
    • Lucy Claridge, The approach to UNDRIP within the African Regional Human Rights System
    • Silvia Gagliardi, Indigenous peoples’ rights in Morocco: subaltern narratives by Amazigh women
    • Shlomit Stein, Reflections on indigenous peoples’ rights vis-à-vis the law of occupation