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    Human Rights, Indigenous Peoples, and the Pursuit of Justice

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    Author
    Hendry, Jennifer
    Tatum, Melissa
    
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    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13051/17251
    Abstract
    There are three major problems with the use of the rights-based approach to tackle issues of Indigenous justice: It privileges (the worldview of) the dominant legal culture; It artificially restricts the conversation about causes of and solutions to problems of Indigenous justice; and It masks the inherent tension between human rights and legal pluralism. We explore the first of these problems in Part I by examining what is meant by a “rights-based approach,” how those ideas came into being, and how they differ from Indigenous conceptions. We address the second problem in Part II, which examines six representative U.S. cases and the patterns that can be derived from those cases. In Part III we turn to the third issue, which we operationalize in order to begin building possible solutions to the problem and possible alternate approaches to achieving justice for Indigenous people.
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