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The Indigenous World 2008
The Indigenous World 2008 is a source of information and an indispensable tool for those who need to be informed about the most recent issues and developments within the indigenous world.

In 2007, the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was formally adopted by the United Nations General Assembly as a comprehensive international standard on human rights. The Declaration emphasizes the collective rights of indigenous peoples. It elaborates upon existing international human rights more...
August 9, 2008
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Located on the outskirts of Skopje Macedonia, about 10 miles from the Kosovo border, Shutka is perhaps the largest Rom (Gypsy) settlement in the world. This 'Little Paris,' as the inhabitants sometimes call it, was built up in the wake of the 1963 earthquake in Skopje. In 1996, Europe's first self-governing Romani administration, Suto Orizari, was created in Shutka. It includes a city hall, 40,000 inhabitants, a hospital, and schools with Romani language classes.

In 2000, just after the war i more...

Added by  Anuradha Bhattacharjee  October 8, 2008

"For Dalitbahujans labour is life. For a Dalitbahujan body, labour is as habitual as eating is to the stomach. In fact, every Dalitbahujan body produces more than it consumes. As a result, Dalitbahujan life recreates itself in labour more than it recreates itself through eating and drinking. While labouring, a Dalitbahujan mind does not disengage from thinking but goes on producing ideas that make labour a pleasure. If labour is not pleasure, if Dalitbahujan minds do not derive pleasure out of t more...

Added by  Shambhu Ghatak  October 8, 2008

"QNW is a nonprofit organization that began as a community initiative in 1974. It is the only organization working on behalf of all Native women in Quebec. It represents women from the Abenaki, Algonquin, Atikamekw, Cree, HuronWendat, Innu, Maliseet, Mi’kmaq , Mohawk and Naskapi nations, as well as women living in urban centres.The mission of the organization is to support and encourage local initiatives that seek to improve the living conditions of Native women and families."


Added by  Anuradha Bhattacharjee  October 6, 2008

"Located on the left bank of the Ubangi River, the 120,000 Ngbandi have lived in this area of forest and plains since the 17th century. Their settlements were dispersed and lack of overall political organization; a hamlet would generally be made up of an extended family or patrilineal clan. They practiced slash-and-burn agriculture growing manioc, maize, sorghum and bananas and lived off fishing and hunting. The Ngbandi had a system of initiation named gaza or ganza: “that which gives strength more...

Added by  Anuradha Bhattacharjee  October 3, 2008

"Living on the left bank of the Zaire River are the Lengola people, who number 100,000. Several ethnicities are also found in this region -- the Mbole, the Yela, and the Metoko, and among them it is difficult to distinguish since their social structure is similar. They make their living from banana farming and hunting. The Butoka society regulates their social, political and economic activities. The Lengola had rituals of circumcision and initiation. Divided into lineages, they are very intrica more...

Added by  Anuradha Bhattacharjee  October 3, 2008

"The eastern coast of the Côte d'Ivoire comprises the area of lagoons. The population here is divided into twelve language groups with Akye being one of them. The Akye numbering 55,000 constitute a part of the Akan group of ethnicities. Before colonization each village was autonomous and, when threatened, they united to form a 'confederation'. Usually these people are not governed by chiefs, although a man's social position is determined by his age."

Added by  Anuradha Bhattacharjee  October 3, 2008

The Bambara numbering 2,500.000 million form the largest ethnic group within Mali. Their traditions include six male societies, each with its own type of mask. Initiation for men lasts for seven years and ends with their symbolic death and their rebirth. Nearly every Bambara man had to pass through these societies in succession, until, upon reaching the highest rank, he had acquired a comprehensive knowledge of ancestral traditions.

The jo society has become a sort of framework for other ini more...

Added by  Anuradha Bhattacharjee  October 3, 2008

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