Including and Excluding Indigenous Religion through Law

Across the world, indigenous peoples enjoy unprecedented access to international, regional, and domestic legal remedies to gain protections for their religious, spiritual, and customary identities, beliefs, and practices through a wide spectrum of judicial platforms. These remedies provide a broad,...

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書目詳細資料
發表在:Numen
主要作者: Årsheim, Helge 1981- (Author)
格式: 電子 Article
語言:English
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出版: Brill 2018
In: Numen
Year: 2018, 卷: 65, 發布: 5/6, Pages: 531-561
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B 原住民 / 宗教 / 少數人權利
Further subjects:B Human Rights law religion indigeneity Canada Norway Ktunaxa Sami Jovsset Ánte Iversen Sara
在線閱讀: Presumably Free Access
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實物特徵
總結:Across the world, indigenous peoples enjoy unprecedented access to international, regional, and domestic legal remedies to gain protections for their religious, spiritual, and customary identities, beliefs, and practices through a wide spectrum of judicial platforms. These remedies provide a broad, inclusive, and “intersectional” vocabulary for indigenous peoples to formulate their rights claims. Despite the growing interest in research on law and religion and the recognition that international human rights law is vital to the formulation of indigenous rights claims, the nature, scope, and effects of the proliferation of international norms protecting “indigenous religion” has so far not been subject to extensive research. Seeking to address this lacuna in the literature, this article explores the extent to which indigenous peoples involved in two recent Supreme Court decisions in Canada and Norway have chosen to rely on the available vocabulary for the formulation of rights claims related to “indigenous religion.”
ISSN:1568-5276
Contains:In: Numen
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1163/15685276-12341511