Beyond Indigenous Property Rights: Exploring the Emergence of a Distinctive Connection Doctrine

Human rights law has begun to offer normative protection for what remains of indigenous lands. Yet territory now better defended from conquest and encroachment is increasingly threatened by their byproducts. Water scarcity, food security, waste deposition, climate change—in short, the multiple impac...

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Main Author: Dannemaier, Eric
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Scholarship@Western 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/aprci/218
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/aprci/article/1226/viewcontent/Beyond_Indigenous_Property_Rights__Exploring_the_Emergence_of_a_Distinctive_Connection_Doctrine.pdf
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spelling ftunivwestonta:oai:ir.lib.uwo.ca:aprci-1226 2023-10-01T03:57:02+02:00 Beyond Indigenous Property Rights: Exploring the Emergence of a Distinctive Connection Doctrine Dannemaier, Eric 2008-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/aprci/218 https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/aprci/article/1226/viewcontent/Beyond_Indigenous_Property_Rights__Exploring_the_Emergence_of_a_Distinctive_Connection_Doctrine.pdf unknown Scholarship@Western https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/aprci/218 https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/aprci/article/1226/viewcontent/Beyond_Indigenous_Property_Rights__Exploring_the_Emergence_of_a_Distinctive_Connection_Doctrine.pdf Aboriginal Policy Research Consortium International (APRCi) indigenous lands land rights traditional lands Environmental Law text 2008 ftunivwestonta 2023-09-03T06:46:10Z Human rights law has begun to offer normative protection for what remains of indigenous lands. Yet territory now better defended from conquest and encroachment is increasingly threatened by their byproducts. Water scarcity, food security, waste deposition, climate change—in short, the multiple impacts of industrial development—pose a new territorial challenge to indigenous communities that will test the reach and capacity of the human rights regime. This Article examines that challenge and argues that a solution may lie in emerging human rights doctrine recognizing indigenous peoples’ land rights not as heirs to a European conception of property, but as peoples with a distinctive historical, cultural, and spiritual relationship to the land and environment. The Article does not purport to create this doctrine, but merely to name it and examine its contours. The author traces multiple sources of law that affirm indigenous property rights based on land- connectedness and proposes, for the sake of analysis, a “distinctive connection” doctrine. The article asks: 1. How has this doctrine been defined and applied in indigenous property claims based, in part, on cultural and spiritual land- relationships; and 2. Can it be effectively deployed to protect against the “new” territorial encroachment: the impact on indigenous communities’ environment? While a distinctive connection has been repeatedly advanced, its contours remain uncertain and it has not been fully deployed to address natural resource and ecological concerns of indigenous peoples. The author thus offers an analytic framework within which the connection might be further understood, emphasizing its relevance to the environment. The article looks at examples of recent indigenous environmental cases—an Inuit climate change claim, Western Shoshone concerns regarding mining practices and nuclear waste disposal on traditional lands, and remedial rights of Inuit communities affected by the Exxon Valdez oil spill—to suggest that a distinctive connection doctrine may ... Text inuit The University of Western Ontario: Scholarship@Western
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Western Ontario: Scholarship@Western
op_collection_id ftunivwestonta
language unknown
topic indigenous lands
land rights
traditional lands
Environmental Law
spellingShingle indigenous lands
land rights
traditional lands
Environmental Law
Dannemaier, Eric
Beyond Indigenous Property Rights: Exploring the Emergence of a Distinctive Connection Doctrine
topic_facet indigenous lands
land rights
traditional lands
Environmental Law
description Human rights law has begun to offer normative protection for what remains of indigenous lands. Yet territory now better defended from conquest and encroachment is increasingly threatened by their byproducts. Water scarcity, food security, waste deposition, climate change—in short, the multiple impacts of industrial development—pose a new territorial challenge to indigenous communities that will test the reach and capacity of the human rights regime. This Article examines that challenge and argues that a solution may lie in emerging human rights doctrine recognizing indigenous peoples’ land rights not as heirs to a European conception of property, but as peoples with a distinctive historical, cultural, and spiritual relationship to the land and environment. The Article does not purport to create this doctrine, but merely to name it and examine its contours. The author traces multiple sources of law that affirm indigenous property rights based on land- connectedness and proposes, for the sake of analysis, a “distinctive connection” doctrine. The article asks: 1. How has this doctrine been defined and applied in indigenous property claims based, in part, on cultural and spiritual land- relationships; and 2. Can it be effectively deployed to protect against the “new” territorial encroachment: the impact on indigenous communities’ environment? While a distinctive connection has been repeatedly advanced, its contours remain uncertain and it has not been fully deployed to address natural resource and ecological concerns of indigenous peoples. The author thus offers an analytic framework within which the connection might be further understood, emphasizing its relevance to the environment. The article looks at examples of recent indigenous environmental cases—an Inuit climate change claim, Western Shoshone concerns regarding mining practices and nuclear waste disposal on traditional lands, and remedial rights of Inuit communities affected by the Exxon Valdez oil spill—to suggest that a distinctive connection doctrine may ...
format Text
author Dannemaier, Eric
author_facet Dannemaier, Eric
author_sort Dannemaier, Eric
title Beyond Indigenous Property Rights: Exploring the Emergence of a Distinctive Connection Doctrine
title_short Beyond Indigenous Property Rights: Exploring the Emergence of a Distinctive Connection Doctrine
title_full Beyond Indigenous Property Rights: Exploring the Emergence of a Distinctive Connection Doctrine
title_fullStr Beyond Indigenous Property Rights: Exploring the Emergence of a Distinctive Connection Doctrine
title_full_unstemmed Beyond Indigenous Property Rights: Exploring the Emergence of a Distinctive Connection Doctrine
title_sort beyond indigenous property rights: exploring the emergence of a distinctive connection doctrine
publisher Scholarship@Western
publishDate 2008
url https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/aprci/218
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/aprci/article/1226/viewcontent/Beyond_Indigenous_Property_Rights__Exploring_the_Emergence_of_a_Distinctive_Connection_Doctrine.pdf
genre inuit
genre_facet inuit
op_source Aboriginal Policy Research Consortium International (APRCi)
op_relation https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/aprci/218
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/aprci/article/1226/viewcontent/Beyond_Indigenous_Property_Rights__Exploring_the_Emergence_of_a_Distinctive_Connection_Doctrine.pdf
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