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         Amazon Basin Indigenous Peoples:     more detail
  1. POLICY OF THE NATIONAL GOVERNMENT IN DEFENSE OF THE RIGHTS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES & THE ECOLOGICAL CONSERVATION OF THE AMAZON BASIN by Columbian Government, 1990
  2. Ancient Peoples of the Great Basin and Colorado Plateau by Steven R. Simms, 2008-05-31
  3. Indian Basketmakers of California and the Great Basin by Larry Dalrymple, 2000-03-15
  4. Mexico South (Pacific Basin Books) by Covarrubias, 1986-01-04
  5. Fluvial Dynamics and Cultural Landscape Evolution in the Rio Grande de Nazca Drainage Basin, Southern Peru (bar s) by Ralf Hesse, 2008-12-31
  6. Great Basin Rock Art: Archaeological Perspectives by Angus R. Quinlan, 2007-01-24
  7. Weavers Of Tradition And Beauty: Basketmakers Of The Great Basin by Mary Lee Fulkerson, Kathleen Curtis, 1995-09-01
  8. Wonderful Power: The Story of Ancient Copper Working in the Lake Superior Basin (Great Lakes Books) by S. R. Martin, 1999-06
  9. Tribes of Native America - Shoshone
  10. River of Renewal: Myth And History in the Klamath Basin by Stephen Most, 2006-10-30
  11. Paleoindian or Paleoarchaic?: Great Basin Human Ecology at the Pleistocene-Holocene Transition
  12. Making Space on the Western Frontier:: Mormons, Miners, and Southern Paiutes by W. Paul Reeve, 2007-03-09
  13. Journeys West: Jane and Julian Steward and Their Guides by Virginia Kerns, 2010-03-01
  14. On Zion's Mount: Mormons, Indians, and the American Landscape by Jared Farmer, 2008-04-30

61. Ayahuasca Patent
In doing so, they have denied any type of colaboration with more than one and ahalf million indigenous peoples of the amazon basin, while we are making an
http://www.dhushara.com/book/diversit/extra/ayap.htm
Genesis of Eden Diversity Encyclopedia
Get the Genesis of Eden AV-CD
Windows / Mac Compatible Includes live video seminars, enchanting renewal songs and a thousand page illustrated codex.
Join SAKINA-Weave A transformative network reflowering Earth's living diversity in gender reunion.
Return to Genesis of Eden? U.S. Patent Office Cancels Patent on Sacred "Ayahuasca" Plant AUTHOR: Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL) PUBLICATION: CIEL Press Release DATE: 4 November 1999 For Immediate Release Thursday, November 4, 1999 U.S. PATENT OFFICE ADMITS ERROR, CANCELS PATENT ON SACRED "AYAHUASCA" PLANT Indigenous Leaders, Legal Experts Hail Decision to Cancel "Flawed Patent" on Sacred Plant from the Amazon, But Call for Reforms to Prevent Future Abuses Washington, D.C. - Indigenous peoples from nine South American countries won a precedent-setting victory yesterday, as the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) canceled the patent issued to a U.S. citizen for the "ayahuasca" vine. The plant, Banisteriopsis caapi, is native to the Amazonian rainforest. Thousands of indigenous people of the region use it in sacred religious and healing ceremonies, as part of their traditional religions.

62. CUNIT-A3.HTM
This site provides a teaching guide that includes the followingReading Assignments, The PreColumbus Category Society Ethnicity indigenous People Caribbean Education...... were invaded by the warrior Caribs originated in the amazon basin of South 1. Whathappened to the indigenous peoples of the islands Arawaks and Caribs?
http://www.messiah.edu/hpages/facstaff/tstoudno/cunit-a3.htm
UNIT-A3
Indigenous Caribbean Peoples and Events
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
  • Reading Assignments The Pre-Columbus Amerindians Video Guide: Caribbean Eye Series: Indigenous Survivors Video Guide: Many Faces of the Caribbean: Part II "The People" Game: Tic-Tac-Toe Game: Caribbean Island Matching
  • TEXT READING:
    Fodor: *26-27, Arawaks and Caribs *43, The Carib People Rogozinski: *14-17, Arawaks and Caribs *26-27, The Encomienda: Indian Slavery *31-33, The Extermination of the Arawak
    REQUIRED LIBRARY REFERENCES
    Beckles/Shepherd: Caribbean Freedom... Craton: Shepherd/Beckles: Caribbean Slavery...
    ACTIVITIES/ASSIGNMENTS
    1. The Pre-Columbus Amerindians
    Adapted from: Ecommusee de Martinique (Guidebook), Riviere-Pilote, Martinique-(1992) 1. 4,000 BC-Pre-Ceramist nomadic groups migrated from Venezuela to the Antilles:
    • Ciboney peoples were remnants of these nomadic groups daily life and economy centered around fishing and gathering lived in camps, scanty shelters, caves and rocky overhangs
    2. Just before the Christian Era, Arawak farmers moved up through the islands:
    • from Bolivia, Peru, Brazil then via the Orinoco Basin of Venezuela

    63. Sea Surface Temperatures Impact Weather In Amazon Basin - 12/24/1999 - ENN News
    temperatures impact weather in amazon basin Friday, December impact on rainfall patternsin the amazon. to save natural forests and indigenous peoples in these
    http://www.enn.com/enn-news-archive/1999/12/122499/sstamazon_8414.asp
    Site Index: Home News ENN Earthnews Affiliates News In-Depth Topics Interact Online Quizzes Postcards Marketplace Advanced Search Advertise Join ENN e-mail Subscription Take our Survey Affiliate Tech Center Post Press Release Help About ENN Site Map Sea surface temperatures impact weather in Amazon basin Friday, December 24, 1999 By Robinson Shaw
    New research concludes that sea surface temperature as much as land cover impacts rainfall. Precipitation patterns in the Amazon rain forest change when the land is altered by clear-cutting and farming. Some areas suffer drought while other areas flood. New research also shows that the sea surface temperature of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans surrounding South America has as much of an influence on rainfall as do changes in land cover, according to Rong Fu, an atmospheric scientist at the Georgia Institute of Technology. "I was surprised by the strength and influence of the western Pacific's sea surface temperatures on Amazon rainfall because moisture from the Pacific Ocean has to travel over the Andes Mountains before it reaches the Amazon region," said Fu. The results of his research were presented at the American Geophysical Union's fall meeting in San Francisco, California. The new finding will help scientists better predict impending drought or floods.

    64. Earth Summit 1997
    lands in the amazon basin and implementing adequate extractive reserves and nonresourceextraction zones; Participation of indigenous peoples in conservation
    http://archive.greenpeace.org/~comms/97/summit/forest01.html

    65. Locate Indigenous Peoples - UNCyberschoolbus
    impact on indigenous peoples, go to the case study on the people of the amazon region.To learn more about the land and location of indigenous peoples, try out
    http://www0.un.org/cyberschoolbus/indigenous/locate_2.asp
    home curriculum indigenous peoples
    Maya of Guatemala
    Amazon tribes
    Maori schools
    Navajo art
    Saami parliament
    "Our roots are deep in the lands where we live. We have a great love for our country, for our birthplace is here. The soil is rich from the bones of thousands of generations. Each of us was created in these lands and it is our duty to take great care of them, because from these lands will spring the future generations of our peoples. We walk about with great respect, for the Earth is a very Sacred Place."
    Sioux, Navajo, and Iroquois Declaration (1978)
    Overview, continued
    Focus:

    Land Rights in the Amazon River Basin
    Project: Family Tree Overview Conflicts Between Cultures Indigenous peoples in every region of the world have experienced conflicts over land and culture. During times of colonial exploration and expansion, "New Worlds" and distant lands were discovered and claimed for colonial governments. The peoples who lived there were often overcome by warfare or by colonial policies that gradually aimed to assimilate native peoples.

    66. Eco-Portal: Forests/Forest Protection/Indigenous Peoples
    amazon Watch works with indigenous and environmental organizations in the amazonBasin to advance indigenous peoples' rights and defend the environment from
    http://www.eco-portal.com/Forests/Forest_Protection/Indigenous_Peoples/welcome.a
    Home Forests Forest Protection : Indigenous Peoples the entire directory only this category More search options
    Links:
    • About Sarawak (Rengah Sarawak) - contains stories and information about and related to the various struggles in Sarawak, Malaysia (Added: Sat Jan 20 2001 Hits: 444 Rating: 7.00 Votes: 3) Rate It
    • Amazon Alliance for Indigenous and Traditional Peoples of the Amazon Basin - a partnership between indigenous and traditional peoples of the Amazon and groups and individuals who share their concerns for the future of the Amazon and its peoples (Added: Fri Jan 26 2001 Hits: 1109 Rating: 1.00 Votes: 1) Rate It
    • Amazon Watch - works with indigenous and environmental organizations in the Amazon Basin to advance indigenous peoples' rights and defend the environment from large-scale industrial development (Added: Fri Jan 12 2001 Hits: 843 Rating: 4.00 Votes: 5) Rate It
    • AmazonCoop - develops sustainable businesses to benefit six Indian tribes of the Brazilian Amazon which comprise its membership (Added: Fri Nov 23 2001 Hits: 743 Rating: 9.00 Votes: 2) Rate It
    • Borneo Project - an Earth Island project that assists Borneo's indigenous peoples in their struggle to regain control of their ancestral lands from the forces of rampant destruction (Added: Mon Feb 05 2001 Hits: 457 Rating: 4.00 Votes: 3)

    67. South America - Rainforest Portal
    amazon Alliance for Traditional peoples of the amazon basin Partnership betweenindigenous and traditional peoples of the amazon and groups and individuals
    http://www.rainforestweb.org/Rainforest_Regions/South_America/
    Home Add a Site Gallery Take Action ... Rainforest Regions South America
    Rainforest News
    Action Alerts Protect an Acre of Rainforest Rainforest Information ...
    What You Can Do

    Tuichi River, Bolivia South America is home to the largest contiguous tropical rainforest in the world, the vast Amazon rainforest. The Amazon spreads across much of South America, including Colombia Ecuador Peru Bolivia ... Surinam , and French Guiana. [more]
    South America Topics:
    South America Links:
    • Amazon Life Hot - Uses the Amazon as a basis for learning about rainforest ecology.
    • Jungle Photos Hot - Amazon rainforest photos and information: animals, plants, native people, scenery, space images, conservation, travel, art. Links to Amazon-related sites: books, movies, retail products, tour operators, education, regular news updates.
    • Amanaka'a Amazon Network - Supports the peoples of the Amazon Rainforest in their efforts to survive and work in harmony with their environment.
    • Amazon Alliance for Traditional Peoples of the Amazon Basin - Partnership between indigenous and traditional peoples of the Amazon and groups and individuals who share their concerns for the future of the Amazon and its peoples.
    • Amazon Watch
    • - Research project on sustainable development in Amazonia. Contains news and publications in English, Spanish, and Portuguese.

    68. Indigenous People Declaration - Bonn
    Antonio Jacanamijoy Tisoy, Columbia Coordinating Body for the IndigenousPeoples Organizations of the amazon basin (COICA). Parshu
    http://www.wrm.org.uy/actors/CCC/IPBonn.html
    Climate Change The Bonn Declaration
    Third International Forum of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities on Climate Change
    July 14 – 15, 2001
    Bonn, Germany Preamble We, the delegates of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities and indigenous organisations in the Third International Forum of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities on Climate Change convened in Bonn on July 14th and 15th, 2001 for the second session of the sixth Conference of Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP6B); reaffirm the Alburquerque Delaration, Quito Declaration, the Lyon Declaration of the First International Forum of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities on Climate Change, and the Hague Declaration of the Second Forum. We have historically and continue to play a fundamental role in the conservation and protection of the forests, biological diversity and the maintenance of ecosystems crucial for the prevention of severe climatic change. Long ago, our elders and our sciences foretold of the severe impacts of Western "development" models based on indiscriminate logging, oil exploitation, mining, carbon-emitting industries, persistent organic pollutants and the insatiable consumption patterns of the industrialized countries. Today, these unsustainable models threaten the very life of Mother Earth and the lives of all of us who are her children. We denounce the fact that neither the UNFCCC nor the Kyoto Protocol recognizes the existence or the contributions of Indigenous Peoples. Furthermore, the debates under these instruments have not considered the suggestions and proposals of the Indigenous Peoples nor have the appropriate mechanisms to guarantee our participation in all the debates that directly concern the Indigenous Peoples been established.

    69. The Peoples Of The World Foundation - Ethnic Minorities In
    be found in the east of the country, in the amazon basin an area Ecuador's indigenouspeoples have become very politically involved in the past 10 years or so
    http://www.peoplesoftheworld.org/ecuador.jsp

    70. CHAVEZ BEGINS NEW TERM WITH ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL CHALLENGES
    that brings together the indigenous communities of the amazon basin. Brazil (Coordinatorof indigenous Organizations of the Brazilian amazon), French Guyana
    http://www.americasnet.net/Commentators/Jorge_Pulecio/pulecio_01_eng.htm
    Indigenous Peoples in the Amazon Organize for Survival
    Communicating in Spanish, Portuguese, English or one of the 400 native languages spoken in their region, representatives of the indigenous societies of the greater Amazon voted in early June for the leaders who will direct the Coordinator of Indigenous Organizations of the Amazon Basin (COICA) for the next four years. Sebastián Manchineri, of Brazil, will replace Colombia's Antonio Jacanamijoi as president of the organization. In his first statement after the election, Manchineri called the international community's attention to three immediate dangers threatening indigenous groups in the Amazon: the penetration of drug trafficking into indigenous communities; the effects of Plan Colombia, the US-backed political stabilization and anti-drug program; and the insistence of important sectors of the international community on viewing the Amazon rainforest as a world heritage site. COICA is a transnational organization that brings together the indigenous communities of the Amazon basin. It is composed of delegations from nine nations: Peru (Inter-Ethnic Development Association of the Peruvian Rainforest), Brazil (Coordinator of Indigenous Organizations of the Brazilian Amazon), French Guyana (Federation of Amerindian Organizations of French Guyana), Guyana (Association of Amerindian Peoples of Guyana), Ecuador (Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of the Ecuadorian Amazon), Suriname (Indigenous Organization of Suriname), Bolivia (Indigenous Confederation of Oriente, Chaco and the Bolivian Amazon); Venezuela (National Council of Venezuelan Indians), and Colombia (Organization of Indigenous Peoples of the Colombian Amazon). Altogether, COICA represents approximately four million indigenous residents of the Amazon.

    71. Environment Links Native Peoples
    amazon Watch Works with indigenous and environmental organizations in the amazonBasin to defend the environment and advance indigenous peoples' rights in the
    http://www.responsiblewildlifemanagement.org/environment_links__native_peoples.h

    72. AMAZON INDIGENOUS WIN PATENT DISPUTE
    Press Release 11/4/99, distributed by amazon Alliance for indigenous and TraditionalPeoples of the amazon basin; Reuters 11/6/99 from El Nuevo Herald web site
    http://www.tao.ca/~ban/1199MSindigvictory.htm
    AMAZON INDIGENOUS WIN PATENT DISPUTE
    November 6, 1999 Source: Weekly News Update of the Americas Indigenous people from nine South American countries won a precedent-setting victory on Nov. 4 when the US Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) canceled the patent issued to a US citizen for a variety of the "ayahuasca" vine. The plant, Banisteriopsis caapi, is native to the Amazon rainforest. More than 400 indigenous tribes in the region use it in traditional religious and healing ceremonies. It is also the principal ingredient in an hallucinogenic drink known in Colombia as yage; a July article in the Miami Herald reported that about a dozen indigenous shamans have begun providing rituals using the drink to educated and prominent Bogota residents. The patent on ayahuasca had been claimed in 1986 by Loren Miller, owner of the California-based International Plant Medicine Corporation, a firm which seeks out commercial uses for little- known plants. The decision to cancel the patent came in response to a request filed with the PTO in March by the Coordinating Body for the Indigenous Organizations of the Amazon Basin (COICA), the Amazon Alliance for Indigenous and Traditional Peoples, and lawyers at the Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL). The PTO based its rejection of the patent on the fact that publications describing the plant were "known and available" prior to the filing of the patent application. According to US patent law, no invention can be patented if described in printed publications more than one year prior to the date of the patent application.

    73. Second International Indigenous Forum On Climate Change
    Ronald Aloema, Surinam Coordinating Body of indigenous Organizations of theAmazon basin (COICA) Organization of indigenous peoples of Surinam (OIS).
    http://bocs.hu/eco-a-1.htm
    Second International Indigenous Forum on Climate Change
    DECLARATION OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES ON CLIMATE CHANGE
    The Hague, November 11-12, 2000 I. PREAMBLE II. CONSIDERATIONS Earth is our Mother. Our special relationship with Earth as stewards, as holders of indigenous knowledge cannot be set aside. Our special relation with her has allowed us to develop for millenia a particular knowledge of the environment that is the foundation of our lifestyles, institutions, spirituality and world view. Therefore, in our philosophies, the Earth is not a commodity, but a sacred space that the Creator has entrusted to us to care for her, this home where all beings live.
    Our traditional knowledge on sustainable use, conservation and protection of our territories has allowed us to maintain our ecosystems in equilibrium. This role has been recognised at the Earth Summit and is and has been our contribution to the planet's economy and sustainability for the benefit present and future generations.
    Our cultures, and the territories under our stewardship, are now the last ecological mechanisms remaining in the struggle against climate devastation. All Peoples of the Earth truly owe a debt to Indigenous Peoples for the beneficial role our traditional subsistence economies play in the maintenance of planet's ecology.

    74. Amazon Tribes: Isolated By Choice?
    aside more than 2 million acres (809,374 hectares) of lush, tropical jungle in theAmazon River basin for the protection of indigenous people living
    http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/03/0310_030310_invisible1.html
    Sign up for our free e-mail newsletter Also see: Today's Top Stories
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    Sponsored in part by
    Amazon Tribes: Isolated by Choice? John Roach
    for National Geographic News
    March 10, 2003
    Get National Geographic
    Subscribe now for a year of animal adventures, dinosaur discoveries, and more.
    View the Uncontacted People Photo Gallery: Go>> No one knows precisely how many people live in isolation from the industrial-technological world. Many of these people, perhaps thousands, are believed to thrive in the remote stretches of the Amazon River Basin of South America. Anthropologists and indigenous rights groups say evidence for the existence of these remote tribes is heard in stories of contact with other indigenous groups, deduced from abandoned dwellings, and seen by developers planning to extract resources from the forests. The rights groups advocate setting aside lands where the isolated peoples are believed to live, to protect them from the intrusion of developers in the Amazon. "Estimating their numbers is problematical because the only means to find out for sure is to go out and find them and that poses all sorts of problems," said Janet Lloyd, an anthropologist in Northumberland, England.

    75. [ACP] International
    Top South America. Amanaka'a – amazon Network. amazon Alliance for Indigenousand Traditional peoples of the amazon basin, The. amazon Watch.
    http://www.aboriginalcanada.gc.ca/abdt/interface/interface2.nsf/vSSGBasic/ao0300
    Home
    International Information
    For information on Aboriginal organizations in other countries, click on the links below. If you would like to learn about Canadian Aboriginal events taking place around the world, click on the following link for Aboriginal Planet
    International
    South America Circumpolar ... Latin America
    International
    Arctic Council (In French Only) Center for World Indigenous Studies Cultural Survival Development Gateway Friends of Peoples Close to Nature ... Top
    Circumpolar
    Aleut Corporation, The Arctic Circle Arctic Council Indigenous Peoples' Secretariat Danish Polar Center ... Top
    Americas
    Indian Law Resource Center Indigenous Language Institute Seventh Generation Fund Society for the Study of the Indigenous Languages of the Americas, The (SSILA) ... Top
    North America
    United States
    American Indian Heritage Foundation American Indian Higher Education Consortium American Indian Movement (Grand Governing Council) American Indian Studies ... Top
    Mexico
    Top
    Central America
    Atihuibancex (Mountain Wind Group) South and Meso American Indian Rights Center, The (SAIIC) United Confederation of Taino People, The (UCTP) Virtual Institute of Carribean Studies, The (VICS) ... Top
    Latin America
    Top
    South America
    Amazon Alliance for Indigenous and Traditional Peoples of the Amazon Basin, The

    76. [Think] Andean Voices - Media Distortion
    1215-01) Quito, Ecuador, January, 2002, COICA - the Coordinating Body for theIndigenous peoples' Organizations of the amazon basin made the following
    http://mail.openprivacy.org/pipermail/think/2002-March/000034.html
    [Think] Andean Voices - Media Distortion
    Fen Labalme fen@comedia.com
    10 Mar 2002 17:42:58 -0800 In a different, but related, vein... Andean Voices Rise Against the War Jason Marti bolivarno@hotmail.com bolivarno@hotmail.com

    77. Bonn Declaration On Climate Change
    Antonio Jacanamijoy Tisoy, Columbia Coordinating Body for the indigenous PeoplesOrganizations of the amazon basin (COICA), Parshu Ram Tamang, Nepal
    http://www.tebtebba.org/tebtebba_files/susdev/cc_energy/bonndeclaration.htm
    The Bonn Declaration Third International Forum of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities on Climate Change
    July 14 - 15, 2001
    Bonn, Germany
    Back
    About Us E-mail Us Bottom of Page
    Preamble We, the delegates of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities and indigenous organisations in the Third International Forum of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities on Climate Change convened in Bonn on July 14th and 15th, 2001 for the second session of the sixth Conference of Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP6B); reaffirm the Alburquerque Delaration, Quito Declaration, the Lyon Declaration of the First International Forum of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities on Climate Change, and the Hague Declaration of the Second Forum. We have historically and continue to play a fundamental role in the conservation and protection of the forests, biological diversity and the maintenance of ecosystems crucial for the prevention of severe climatic change. Long ago, our elders and our sciences foretold of the severe impacts of Western "development" models based on indiscriminate logging, oil exploitation, mining, carbon-emitting industries, persistent organic pollutants and the insatiable consumption patterns of the industrialized countries. Today, these unsustainable models threaten the very life of Mother Earth and the lives of all of us who are her children. We denounce the fact that neither the UNFCCC nor the Kyoto Protocol recognizes the existence or the contributions of Indigenous Peoples. Furthermore, the debates under these instruments have not considered the suggestions and proposals of the Indigenous Peoples nor have the appropriate mechanisms to guarantee our participation in all the debates that directly concern the Indigenous Peoples been established.

    78. Abya Yala Net
    This site presents information on indigenous peoples in Mexico, Central, and SouthAmerica. For more information on this project, read about Abya Yala Net.
    http://abyayala.nativeweb.org/

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    Abya Yala Net This site presents information on Indigenous peoples in Mexico, Central, and South America. For more information on this project, read about Abya Yala Net
    Mexico
    The Meso American Region
    South America

    79. Researching Indigenous Peoples Rights Under International Law
    indigenous, first nations, aboriginal, human rights research, researching, international law RESEARCHING indigenous peoples RIGHTS UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW online materials on indigenous peoples rights under international law. the World's indigenous peoples 3. The decade from
    http://intelligent-internet.info/law/ipr2.html
    RESEARCHING INDIGENOUS PEOPLES RIGHTS UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW Steven C. Perkins This is a revision of a document prepared for presentation at the 1992 Annual Meeting of the American Association of Law Libraries. It may be reproduced for non-profit educational use if this notice appears on the reproduction. Table of Contents I: Introduction This Indigenous Peoples' Web Ring site is owned by
    Steven C. Perkins

    Previous 5 Sites
    Previous Next ... Join the Ring
    RESEARCHING INDIGENOUS PEOPLES RIGHTS UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW
    Steven C. Perkins This is a revision of a document prepared for presentation at the 1992 Annual Meeting of the American Association of Law Libraries. It may be reproduced for non-profit educational use if this notice appears on the reproduction.
    INTRODUCTION
    This paper was originally produced in 1992, prior to the INTERNET and the explosion of information it has engendered. In updating it, I have tried to create links to online materials on indigenous peoples rights under international law. This paper is not meant to be a comprehensive guide to information on indigenous people. It is meant to be a guide to researching international law and indigenous peoples rights. Since this paper was finished, S James Anaya has published an excellent treatise on this area

    80. Klima-Bündnis - Alianza Del Clima, Climate Alliance, Indigenous Peoples: Politi
    Ronald Aloema, Surinam Coordinating Body of indigenous Organizations of the AmazonBasin (COICA) Organization of indigenous peoples of Surinam (OIS), Sam Ferrer
    http://www.klimabuendnis.org/kbhome/english/politics/4111h.htm
    Second International Indigenous Forum on Climate Change Declaration of Indigenous Peoples on Climate Change The Hague, November 11-12, 2000
    The Hague on the 15th of November, 2000: Parshuram Tamang, Nepal
    International Alliance of Indigenous
    Tribal -Peoples of the Tropical Forests Antonio Jacanamijoy, Colombia
    Coordinating Body of Indigenous
    Organizations of the Amazon Basin (COICA) Ronald Aloema, Surinam
    Coordinating Body of Indigenous
    Organizations of the Amazon Basin (COICA)
    Organization of Indigenous Peoples of Surinam (OIS) Sam Ferrer, Philippines
    Climate Action Network, Southeast Asia
    (CANSEA) Clark Peteru, Samoa Indigenous Peoples Biodiversity Network Hendro Sangkoyo, Indonesia Consortium for Community Forest Systems Jocelyn Therese, French Guyana Coordinating Body of Indigenous Organizations of the Amazon Basin (COICA) Federation of Amerindian Organizations of French Guyana (FOAG) Alejandro Argumedo, Peru

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