Indigenous peoples as international political actors: a summary

TitleIndigenous peoples as international political actors: a summary
Publication TypeJournal Article
AuthorsTennberg, Monica
JournalPolar Record
Volume46
Issue3
Pagination264-270
ISSN1475-3057, 0032-2474
AbstractThe article discusses the results of a three year research project studying international indigenous political activism using case studies from the Arctic. Drawing on two different disciplinary starting points, international relations and international law, the project addressed two interrelated questions. The first of these was how relations between states, international organisations and indigenous peoples have been and are currently constructed as legal and political practices; the second was how indigenous peoples construct their political agency through different strategies to further their political interests. These questions are addressed from the point of view of power relations. The power to act is the basic form of political agency. However, this power may take different forms of political action, for example, self-identification, participation, influence, and representation. The main conclusions of the article are: 1) indigenous political agency is based on multiple forms of power; 2) practices of power that enable and constrain indigenous political agency change over time; 3) power circulates and produces multiple sites of encounters for states, international organisations and indigenous people; 4) indigenous political agency is a question of acting; and 5) there are new challenges ahead for indigenous peoples in claiming a political voice, in particular in global climate politics.
URLhttps://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/polar-record/article/abs/indigenous-peoples-as-international-political-actors-a-summary/8C0A15FD7E43EADD6C3EEF2F5FAD133C
DOI10.1017/S0032247409990398
Short TitleIndigenous peoples as international political actors
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