publiée le 05/07/2012 par
Dans le cadre du congrès de l’Association Européenne des Anthropologues Sociaux (EASA) intitulé Uncertainty and disquiet (10 au 13 juillet 2012), Charles Menzies (University of British Columbia) et Irène Bellier (CNRS-IIAC/LAIOS- EHESS-SOGIP) coordonneront un panel intitulé “Indigenous Rights in a global context” qui aura lieu à l’université Paris Ouest Nanterre-La Défense, le 12 juillet à partir de 11h30 (Théâtre 3). Pour obtenir des informations sur l’ensemble des panels, veuillez cliquer ici.
Panel “Indigenous Rights in a global context” : présentations
Pour consulter le programme complet et les résumés des présentations en anglais, veuillez cliquer ici
Coordinateurs :
Charles Menzies (University of British Columbia)
Irène Bellier (CNRS-IIAC/LAIOS-EHESS-SOGIP)
Interventions :
The appropriation of Navajo weavers’ designs : historicizing gendered and globalized injustice
Kathy M’Closkey (University of Windsor)
Land governance in Eeyou Istchee : emergence and renewal of Cree institutions
Colin Scott (McGill University)
Marine rights and coastal indigenous peoples of the North Pacific
Author : Thomas Thornton (University of Oxford)
Lip service ? Indigenous engagement in closing the gap – Fitzroy Crossing, North-Western Australia
Martin Préaud (EHESS)
The Indians, the supreme court and the indigenous rights in Brazil
Renato Athias (Federal University of Pernambuco (Brazil)
(Re)embedding indigenous organizations to fit new legal frameworks
Sabine Kradolfer (Universitat Autónoma de Barcelona)
Indigenous rights in East and West Panama : a comparative perspective
Mònica Martínez-Mauri (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona/Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales)
Undrip and indigenous autonomy in Taiwan : a legal framework under construction
Scott Simon (University of Ottawa)
Indigenous rights and traditional authorities in Namibia
Jennifer Hays (EHESS Paris / University of Tromsø)
State codification of indigeneity and access to development
Sidsel Saugestad (University of Tromsø)
On “glocal” governance : on the consequences of the “vernacularization” of human rights concepts for Sámi people in northern Europe
Reetta Toivanen (University of Helsinki)
“So that people would start to respect us” : the Russian Sami parliament as a new institution of stability in times of uncertainty
Vladislava Vladimirova (University of Tromsø/Uppsala University)