What can we learn from Indigenous Peoples Law and Methodology?

Objective: The paper analyses the deep contributions of Indigenous knowledge on enriching and encouraging change to laws and research and training the Western legal systems to listen to other voices that have been silenced for centuries. Methodology: The argumentation developed in the paper is based...

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Main Author: Poto
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2318/1786396
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spelling ftunivtorino:oai:iris.unito.it:2318/1786396 2023-09-05T13:17:46+02:00 What can we learn from Indigenous Peoples Law and Methodology? Poto Poto 2021 http://hdl.handle.net/2318/1786396 eng eng firstpage:289 lastpage:309 numberofpages:21 journal:REVISTA JURÍDICA http://hdl.handle.net/2318/1786396 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2021 ftunivtorino 2023-08-22T22:31:04Z Objective: The paper analyses the deep contributions of Indigenous knowledge on enriching and encouraging change to laws and research and training the Western legal systems to listen to other voices that have been silenced for centuries. Methodology: The argumentation developed in the paper is based on interdisciplinary research (intertwining social and legal reflections on the three principles of inclusion, coexistence, and resilience) and on a novel approach to comparative law, which includes elements of indigenous law and empirical research (e.g. in the part of the Sea Sámi and traditional fishers), and therefore goes beyond the desk-based comparison of Western-based state laws (e.g. in the last section). Results: The paper is divided into four sections: section 1 examines the constituent elements drawn from the training on Indigenous law and methodology: inclusion, coexistence, and resilience. Section 2 refers to the need for inclusion and interaction between different legal orders (state law and Indigenous and traditional peoples’ legal orders), focusing on the case study of the Belo Monte Hydroelectric Power Plant in the Xingu Basin, Brazil. Section 3 develops the theme of coexistence analysing the Indigenous legal traditions of the Northern Coastal peoples in the county of Troms (Sea Sámi and traditional fishers), still kept alive and somehow co-existing with the Norwegian system of coastal governance. Section 4 focuses on resilience with a case study on the Arctic and the local and Indigenous peoples’ response to the challenges posed by climate change. Finally, the concluding remarks open the floor for a reflection on a new ontology of the relationship between humans and the natural world. Contributions: The study addresses a topic still unfamiliar to the academic world, by adopting a novel approach to comparative law that bridges indigenous and non indigenous views, and by proposing a new understanding of inclusion, coexistence and resilience, that strengthens the mutual relationship between human ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Climate change Troms Università degli studi di Torino: AperTo (Archivio Istituzionale ad Accesso Aperto) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Università degli studi di Torino: AperTo (Archivio Istituzionale ad Accesso Aperto)
op_collection_id ftunivtorino
language English
description Objective: The paper analyses the deep contributions of Indigenous knowledge on enriching and encouraging change to laws and research and training the Western legal systems to listen to other voices that have been silenced for centuries. Methodology: The argumentation developed in the paper is based on interdisciplinary research (intertwining social and legal reflections on the three principles of inclusion, coexistence, and resilience) and on a novel approach to comparative law, which includes elements of indigenous law and empirical research (e.g. in the part of the Sea Sámi and traditional fishers), and therefore goes beyond the desk-based comparison of Western-based state laws (e.g. in the last section). Results: The paper is divided into four sections: section 1 examines the constituent elements drawn from the training on Indigenous law and methodology: inclusion, coexistence, and resilience. Section 2 refers to the need for inclusion and interaction between different legal orders (state law and Indigenous and traditional peoples’ legal orders), focusing on the case study of the Belo Monte Hydroelectric Power Plant in the Xingu Basin, Brazil. Section 3 develops the theme of coexistence analysing the Indigenous legal traditions of the Northern Coastal peoples in the county of Troms (Sea Sámi and traditional fishers), still kept alive and somehow co-existing with the Norwegian system of coastal governance. Section 4 focuses on resilience with a case study on the Arctic and the local and Indigenous peoples’ response to the challenges posed by climate change. Finally, the concluding remarks open the floor for a reflection on a new ontology of the relationship between humans and the natural world. Contributions: The study addresses a topic still unfamiliar to the academic world, by adopting a novel approach to comparative law that bridges indigenous and non indigenous views, and by proposing a new understanding of inclusion, coexistence and resilience, that strengthens the mutual relationship between human ...
author2 Poto
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Poto
spellingShingle Poto
What can we learn from Indigenous Peoples Law and Methodology?
author_facet Poto
author_sort Poto
title What can we learn from Indigenous Peoples Law and Methodology?
title_short What can we learn from Indigenous Peoples Law and Methodology?
title_full What can we learn from Indigenous Peoples Law and Methodology?
title_fullStr What can we learn from Indigenous Peoples Law and Methodology?
title_full_unstemmed What can we learn from Indigenous Peoples Law and Methodology?
title_sort what can we learn from indigenous peoples law and methodology?
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/2318/1786396
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
Troms
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
Troms
op_relation firstpage:289
lastpage:309
numberofpages:21
journal:REVISTA JURÍDICA
http://hdl.handle.net/2318/1786396
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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