Thursday, December 20, 2012

New Book: Nomadic Peoples and Human Rights


Nomadic Peoples and Human Rights

By Jérémie Gilbert

To Be Published 1st June 2013 by Routledge – 256 pages

Although nomadic peoples are scattered worldwide and have highly heterogeneous lifestyles, they face similar threats to their mobile livelihood and survival. Commonly, nomadic peoples are facing pressure from the predominant sedentary world over mobility, land rights, water resources, access to natural resources, and migration routes. Adding to these traditional problems, rapid growth in the extractive industry and the need for the exploitation of the natural resources are putting new strains on nomadic lifestyles. While it is difficult to provide a clear estimate of nomadic peoples around the world, there is an agreement that their nomadic way of life, as well as their survival, is in danger, and that nomadism itself is facing extinction.
This book provides an innovative rights-based approach to the issue of nomadism looking at issues including discrimination, segregation, freedom of movement, land rights, cultural and political rights, and the environment and effective management of natural resources. The book analyses the extent to which human rights law is able to provide some form of protection for nomadic peoples to perpetuate their own way of life and culture, and sets out why such protection should be granted. It questions whether the current human rights regime is able to protect nomadic peoples, highlighting the lacuna that currently exists in international human rights law in relation to nomadic peoples. It goes on to propose avenues for the development of specific rights for nomadic peoples offering a new reading on freedom of movement in the context of nomadic peoples and on nomadic peoples’ rights to land and natural resources.

Contents
1. Discrimination: Genocide, Segregation and Criminalisation
 2. Mobility: From Sedentarisation to Freedom of Movement 
3. Nomadic Territories: Land Rights as Human Rights
 4. Mobile Services as a Human Rights 
5. Identity: Cultural and Political Rights 6. Nomadic Peoples, Development and the Environment

Author Bio
Jérémie Gilbert is Senior Lecturer at Middlesex University, UK.


By 
Kalidas Shinde
PhD Scholar
Tata Institute of Social Sciences
Mumbai


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