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KENYA: 10 September 2004 - A group of Maasai women sing at the foot of Mount Longonot as they seek to reclaim grazing land that was leased to the British under a 90-year-old agreement.AFP/Getty Images

Indigenous Peoples:
Recommended resources

News and updates

Human rights of Indigenous peoples blog

Current campaigns and actions

Stolen Sisters - Discrimination and violence against Indigenous women in Canada

Lubicon Cree

Grassy Narrows

Ipperwash Inquiry

UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples

Reports on Indigenous Peoples in Canada

No More Stolen Sisters: The Need for a Comprehensive Response to Violence and Discrimination Against Indigenous Women in Canada (30 September 2009)

'Pushed to the Edge': The Land Rights of Indigenous Peoples in Canada (13 September 2009)

'A Place to Regain Who We Are': Land Rights at Grassy Narrows (21 June 2009)

Land and Life Under Threat: The Lubicon Cree (18 October 2008)

The law of the land: Amnesty International Canada's position on the conflict over logging at Grassy Narrows (20 September 2007)

Indigenous Peoples, Land Rights and the Justice System: Making Human Rights A Priority (July 28, 2006)

Ipperwash: Time for a new approach to land rights (August 25, 2006)

Canada: Stolen Sisters - A human rights response to discrimination and violence against Indigenous women in Canada (4 October 2004)

International Human Rights Standards

Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples

Convention (No.169) concerning Indigenous and Tribal Peoples in Independent Countries

Web sites

Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights - Indigenous Peoples

 

Photo credit: 10 September 2004 - A group of Maasai women sing at the foot of Mount Longonot as they seek to reclaim grazing land that was leased to the British under a 90-year-old agreement.AFP/Getty Images

Take Action

Warning signs on Lubicon land

Canada: Justice overdue for the Lubicon Cree

Thirty years of unchecked oil and gas development has had a devastating impact on the lives of the Lubicon Cree in northern Alberta. No other human rights case in Canada has been so often condemned by the United Nations.

Take Action >>

The Human Rights of Indigenous Peoples: Overview

Despite some progress over the last decade, indigenous peoples around the world continue to live in hardship and danger due to the failure of states to uphold their fundamental human rights.

Indigenous peoples are being uprooted from their lands and communities as a consequence of discriminatory government policies, the impact of armed conflicts, and the actions of private economic interests.

Cut off from resources and traditions vital to their welfare and survival, many indigenous peoples are unable to fully enjoy such human rights as the right to food, the right to health, the right to housing, or cultural rights. Instead they face marginalisation, poverty, disease and violence – in some instances extinction as a people.

With the disruption of traditional ways of life, indigenous women may face particular challenges, losing status in their own society or finding that frustration and strife in the community is mirrored by violence in the household. For the growing numbers of indigenous women who have migrated to urban settings or who live on land with a heavy military presence, racial and sexual discrimination in the larger society may lead to a heightened risk of violence and unequal access to the protection of the justice system.

Promoting Global standards

Amnesty works with Indigenous peoples around the globe to advance urgently needed laws and standards to protect their cultures, livelihoods and territories. The most significant of these is the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples [see right sidebar for link].

Denouncing abuses

Social marginalization and legal discrimination place Indigenous peoples at risk of a wide range of human rights violations directed against community leaders, individuals and Indigenous societies as a whole. Amnesty International takes action by exposing abuses in reports and the press, and by mobilizing public pressure through tools like our Urgent Action Network.

Holding Canadian officials responsible

The Canadian government has told the United Nations that the situation of Indigenous peoples is “the most pressing human rights issue facing Canadians.” Yet the Canadian government has repeatedly failed to implement UN the recommendations of UN human rights bodies concerning the protection of Indigenous peoples’ rights in Canada. Amnesty International’s work in Canada has included the land rights of the Lubicon Cree, the police shooting of Dudley George, and violence against Indigenous women.


Updated: 1 December 2009