AJIL Unbound (Jan 2024)

The Significance of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples

  • S. James Anaya

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/aju.2024.20
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 118
pp. 134 – 138

Abstract

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Rabiat Akande's article, “An Imperial History of Race-Religion in International Law,” persuasively demonstrates the interplay of racial and religious discrimination both historically and today, and argues that this race-religious nexus is not now adequately addressed by international law.1 Featured in the article is a historical account of the early colonial-era practices and patterns of thought that regarded people indigenous to the Americas and Africa as inferior in significant part due to their non-Christian religious practices and identities. The article's assessment of contemporary international law as it relates to the “race-religious othering” provides important insights into the shortcomings of formal international legal sources and their application. That assessment, however, sidelines or even downplays relevant developments that can provide hope for the victims of that othering, developments that include the adoption of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (“the Declaration” or “the UN Indigenous Rights Declaration”).2 Akande's article summarily dismisses the significance of the Declaration with cursory questioning of its impact and legal character. This essay responds to Akande's treatment of the Declaration and overall sidelining of relevant developments internationally concerning Indigenous peoples.