User:Carwil/Indigenous Rights Resources

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Assignment sheet for 2023 is here

Some extra advice on article selection[edit]

Here are some possible directions to brainstorm a topic:

  • There are numerous Indigenous ethnic group articles with low-quality articles that could be written as comprehensive introductions to a people.
  • Indigenous territories past and present may need articles. Browse the categories within Category:Lands reserved for indigenous peoples for present day examples and for what's missing. Wikipedia provides one of the most extensive reference guides to historical territories in most regions of the world, but only a few Indigenous territories are covered separately from the peoples themselves. See Comancheria for an effective example. Consider interrupting a redirect from territory names like Kajka Ika and Newe Sogobia and writing an article about traditional territories.
  • Sacred spaces like Inyan Kara Mountain often feature only brief coverage of their significance to Native peoples.

Consider these ideas based on the themes explored in the class:

  • Rethinking American History / Conquest and Treaties: Choose a major historical episode in U.S.–Native American history and see how it is described on Wikipedia. Look at pages for the event, for treaties, for key figures, and for the territory involved. Are its consequences for the peoples and lands involved included and well documented?
  • The Transnational Indigenous Movement and the United Nations: Choose an area of indigenous rights represented in the Declaration, an organization involved in the transnational indigenous movement, or a major transnational indigenous gathering. Consider the biography of a major figure in rights-making and -claiming at the international level
  • The Saramaka’s Legal Odyssey / Indigenous Rights in the Inter-American human rights system: Write in detail about the Saramaka people. Or examine another case that was pursued through the Inter-American system. Browse the Indigenous World reports (linked below), which offer an annual global look at Indigenous struggles around the world. Look at this list of indigenous rights cases before the Inter-American Court or consider examples discussed in the Commission's reports on Extractive Industries or other thematic reports.
  • American Indian Mobilization in the 1960s [no longer a section of our syllabus, but we explore this briefly]: Examine an episode of the Red Power generation in depth: e.g., the Alcatraz occupation, the Trail of Broken Treaties, or other local events mentioned in Dunbar-Ortiz or Like a Hurricane.
  • Anishinaabe Activism / Ecological Resistance Protests / Standing Rock: Provide detailed background on a major ecological resistance encampment or campaign. Examine the project involved, its ecological effects, and the organizing around it.

Once you have article ideas in mind remember that you will need to use reliable sources to significantly improve the article.

  • Do initial research and make sure that you can find high-quality sources on the topic.
  • Mentally assess the article yourself and make sure it doesn't already qualify as a B-class article or better.
  • Search Wikipedia to make sure that the content you want to write isn't already there in a related article.

Relevant projects, templates, and resources on Wikipedia[edit]

Possible general references[edit]

Possible references to be used. Digitizes so main portions can be read online.Moxy (talk) 21:30, 16 January 2012 (UTC)

  • Aman Gupta (1 September 2005). Human Rights Of Indigenous Peoples. Gyan Publishing House. ISBN 978-81-8205-275-8.
  • Florencia Roulet (1 January 1999). Human rights and indigenous peoples: a handbook on the UN system. IWGIA. ISBN 978-87-90730-07-9. Full text online.
  • J. K. Das (1 December 2001). Human rights and indigenous peoples. APH Publishing. ISBN 978-81-7648-243-1.
  • Michel Streich (1 September 2009). Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-74175-845-0.
  • S. James Anaya (23 September 2004). Indigenous peoples in international law. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-517350-5.
  • Ishay, Micheline (2012). The human rights reader: major political essays, speeches, and documents from ancient times to the present. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-95160-9.
  • Tony Simpson (1 January 1997). Indigenous heritage and self-determination: the cultural and intellectual property rights of indigenous peoples. IWGIA. ISBN 978-87-984110-3-1. (Introduction online.)
  • Dunbar-Ortiz, Roxanne; Sambo Dorough, D.; Alfredsson, Gudmundur; Swepstom, L.; Wille, Petter (2015). Indigenous peoples’ rights in international law: Emergence and application. Vol. 2. Kautokeino & Copenhagen: International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs. (Full text online.)

News sources[edit]

Not all of these are reliable sources under Wikipedia guidelines, but they provide a broad range of current indigenous rights news for you to research.

--Carwil (talk) 19:35, 16 February 2012 (UTC)

Resources on indigenous rights struggles[edit]

Researching the Inter-American Commission / Court on Human Rights[edit]

There are Wikipedia articles on the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR / CIDH) and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACtHR / CorteIDH).

Extensive information is archived at the website of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights:

  • Its Annual, Thematic, and Country Reports
    • Indigenous and Tribal Peoples of the Pan-Amazon Region
    • Indigenous Women
    • Indigenous Peoples, Communities of African Descent, Extractive Industries
    • Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women in British Columbia, Canada
    • Report on Immigration in the United States: Detention and Due Process
    • Indigenous and Tribal Peoples' Rights over their Ancestral Lands and Natural Resources (2009)
    • Captive Communities: The Situation of the Guarani Indigenous People and Contemporary Forms of Slavery in the Bolivian Chaco (2009)
  • Numerous reports on cases brought before the IACHR (searchable within each category).
  • Comisión Interamericana de Derechos Humanos Facebook page with its 2020 videos

The Inter-American Court of Human Rights has a bilingual website (link to English website):