Indigenous Reference Site The report contains a brief history of this relationship, along with a discussion of the terms, issues and events leading to the design and implementation of programmes. relationship with indigenous and tribal peoples in the a policy addressing indigenous peoples (IPs). The document http://www.ukans.edu/~insp/referencesite.html
Extractions: 1. Artic 8.Great Basin 12.Circum-Caribbean 14.Mato Grosso ASIA 21.Chittagong Hill 26. Kalahari Desert Aleut Shoshone Akawaio Borbora 19. North and Tract Peoples San Chipewyan Ute Bari (Motilones) Botocudo Central Asia Chakma Inuit Choquie Ge (Central) Ainu Marma 27. Ituri Forest Saami 9. Southwest Guajiro Guato Hui Tripura Efe Apache Karina Kaduveo Manchu Lese 2. Sub-Arctic Dine (Hopi) Kogi Kaingang Miao 22. South East Asia Mbuti Cree Navajo Otomac Karaja Mongolian Chin Dene Zuni Paez Kayapo (Southern) Taiwan Aborigines Hmong 28. Australia and Naskapi Yarawato Tupi Tibetan Kachin the Pacific Ojibwa 10. Pacific NW Coast Yukpa Uighur Karen Aboriginals Bella Coola 15. Gran Chaco Yi Kedang Arapesh North America Chinook South America Ache Zhuang Lisu Asmat 3. Eastern
Links On The Subject Of Indigenous Peopels In Asia Links to the indigenous peoples in Asia A small selection outof the numerous links to indigenous peoples in Asia. indigenous http://www.indigasia.org/eng/peoples/asialinkse.htm
International - Unrepresented Nations & Peoples Organisation Separatism. eLandnet The electronic highway to unrepresented nations, indigenouspeoples and national minorities worldwide. hmong (Laos, Thailand, Vietname), http://www.politicalresources.net/int6.htm
Extractions: Last updated: UNPO Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation UNPO Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation UNPO Members MINELRES Directory of resources on minority human rights and related problems of the transition period in Eastern and Central Europe European Centre for Minority Issues ECMI Minority Rights Group International Promotes the rights of ethnic, linguistic and religious minorities Minorities and Unrepresented Nations in the World French Institute for the study of MicroStates Index of Unrepresented Microstates French Institute for the study of MicroStates The Micronations Page Micronational Links MicroWorld The Micronations Database ... Ethnic World Survey CIEMEN Native Web Indigenous Studies The World Wide Web Virtual Library The World Wide Web Virtual Library League of Secessionist States Homelands Homeland movements worldwide Separatism eLandnet The electronic highway to unrepresented nations, indigenous peoples and national minorities worldwide Links to National Hompages Abkhazia Chechen Republic Kosovo Kurdistan ... Tibet Assyria (Iraq) Assyrian Map Assyria Homepage Atour - The State of Assyria Nineveh On-Line Assyrian Community Assyrian International News Agency Genocides Against the Assyrian Nation Bet-Nahrain Democratic Party Hmong (Laos, Thailand, Vietname)
Indigenous Peoples a historical archive of the political struggles waged by indigenous peoples to assert HmongHomepage http//www.hmongnet.org/ A detailed directory of internet http://www.gustavus.edu/oncampus/academics/library/Guides/Indigenous.html
Extractions: Click on "Search" button in the green band to look for books and other materials in our library. To broaden your search, set the library choice to "all PALS libraries." If you see a book that you want to order through Interlibrary Loan, use the button at the bottom of the page. Use the barcode number on your ID card and your last name as your password. You will be notified by e-mail when the book arrives. MnLink Offers access to databases and a combined catalog of Minnesota libraries. To search a number of academic libraries at once, click on Search, then use the drop-down list under the state map to choose Colleges and Universities. To request by Interlibrary Loan, print out the references for the books you want and write your name and ID barcode number on the top; drop the print off at the Interlibrary Loan counter. Looking for Articles Annual Review of Anthropology
Association Of American Geographers of, by, and for the peoples Participatory Mapping sustainability the case of theHmong in Northern The Globalization of indigenous Knowledge A Critique of http://convention.allacademic.com/aag2003/topic2.html?topic_id=27
SHAMANISM THROUGH THE EYES OF THE HMONG Webster Online Dictionary, shamanism is a religion practiced by indigenous peoplesof far in Siberia (which is also another country that the hmong have been http://www.uwec.edu/academic/curric/greidebe/Chinese.Japan/student.web.pages/Sha
Extractions: SHAMANISM THROUGH THE EYES OF THE HMONG BY NALEE XIONG It is believed by some Hmong that their ancestors adopted shamanism from the Chinese. They believe this because some older shamans have been known to communicate to their spirits in the Chinese language when they are in a trance. There are also other similar ties between the two cultures, such as animism, filial piety, and feng shui. However, shamanism seems to be the most accurately adopted one in the transition between the Hmong and Chinese. Because of this, I will be using mainly Hmong shamanism as examples rather than the limited information of Chinese shamanism to explain the concepts of shamanism; the oldest still practiced tradition of the world. The Hmong are people who have no land of their own. It is believed that the origination of the Hmong was in China. In fact, it is said that they were in fact there before the Chinese. However, after being defeated by the Chinese in a war, they migrated to Laos.
Human Organization, Summer 1997 article posits that the conservation of indigenous knowledge for and by the localpeoples could have Economic Transformation in a hmong Village of Thailand http://www.sfaa.net/ho/1997/summer1997.html
Extractions: "Participation" and "participatory development" have become mantras in contemporary development discourse. But certain cultural settings are better suited to local participation and collective action than others are. Participation works best when it is based in, rather than in opposition to, existing organizations. In northeastern Brazil, regional tradition and existing social, economic, and political structures pose strong challenges to horizontal social organization and thus to popular mobilization and participatory development. Although certain democratizing trends have weakened traditional authorities, prior organization still poses challenges, which must be recognized and systematically addressed in policy planning and in project design and implementation.
Title hmong Development Association of Thailand (MDT) is a member of the InternationalIndigenous and Tribal peoples Alliance by its nature. http://www.hmongthailand.com/nairobi/default.asp
Links Zum Thema Indigene Völker In Asien Translate this page Vietnam The Montagnard Foundation. Noch mehr Links gibt es bei The World Wide WebVirtual Library indigenous STUDIES. USA Center for World indigenous Studies. http://indigasia.org/dt/voelker/Asienallg/asialinks.htm
Directory Of Human Rights Resources On The Internet The Lao Human Rights Council site contains information about human rights violationsagainst Lao and hmong people in Laos and refugees in Thailand; information http://shr.aaas.org/dhr/detail.php?e_id=138
Extractions: by Sheila Pinkel When I purchased a five foot by ten foot Hmong history embroidery at the Marin County Fair in the summer of 1987, it never occurred to me that I would ever visit the refugee camps where it was made. Soon after the purchase I visited Fresno, California, to have a Hmong family explain the stories and symbology embedded in the embroidery. It was there that I learned that over 60,000 Hmong were living in refugee camps in Thailand and that most of them had been in camps since 1975 when the Vietnamese had taken control of Laos. Subsequently I learned that 350,000 Cambodians lived in camps along the Thai-Cambodian border, and that in addition to Vietnamese and Laotian refugees living in Thailand, thousands of Burmese and Karen tribespeople were coming into Thailand across the western Thai border. I was impressed that neither I nor most of my friends were aware of the extent of the refugee presence in Thailand and that none of us had ever seen pictures of these camps. My own interest in the Hmong and Laotian history and refugee camps stems from a larger concern about the effect of the United States' military intervention on the history of foreign countries and peoples. Since 1980 I have been researching U.S. military involvement and the extent to which we arm foreign countries. This book is an extention of a larger exploration of the effect of U.S. intervention on the lives and habitat of the people who live in those countries.