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Universal Rights in Conflict: ‘Backlash’ and ‘Benevolent Resistance’ to Indigenous Land Rights

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Universal Rights in Conflict: ‘Backlash’ and ‘Benevolent Resistance’ to Indigenous Land Rights
Author(s)Mackey, Eva
AbstractThe emergence of indigenous rights movements throughout the world reflects, in part, the increasing legitimacy of human rights regimes and ideologies. Human rights are ‘now universal’ in the sense that ‘virtually all states have formally endorsed them’ and citizens and organizations of all kinds ‘invoke them.’ Indigenous rights are important on a global scale and are also deeply controversial issues at national and local levels. This paper examines conflict over land rights based on three years of ethnographic fieldwork in two local conflict zones, namely western New York State (USA) and western Ontario (Canda). Here I explore how land rights and belonging are contested in these local sites.
IssueNo2
Pages14-20
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceAnthropology Today
VolumeNo21
PubDateApril 2005
ISBN_ISSN0268-540X

War, Violence, and Hegemony

  • Ethnic Suppression and Genocide
  • Exploitation and Human Rights
  • Terrorism and War
  • Violence and Aggression


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