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Workshops SOGIP | WORKSHOP SOGIP 2013 : "Indigenous peoples and their rights to land : land policy and use, conservation, extractive industries", Paris, 18-19-20-21 juin 2013

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WORKSHOP SOGIP 2013 : "Indigenous peoples and their rights to land : land policy and use, conservation, extractive industries", Paris, 18-19-20-21 juin 2013 - 7 juin 2013

INDIGENOUS PEOPLES AND THEIR RIGHTS TO LAND :
LAND POLICY AND USE, CONSERVATION, EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES

PARIS : 18-19-20-21 June 2013

Traduction simultanée en anglais, français et espagnol

La conférence de Arturo Escobar du 18 juin 2013 est en accès libre

Workshop international : 19, 20, 21 juin : en raison d’un nombre de place limité dans les lieux de conférence, l’accès y est restreint

Presentation :

SOGIP’s international workshops are designed to expand and enrich our reflection on indigenous rights and self-determination in today’s globalized world through opening a dialogue with indigenous and non-indigenous actors and researchers. The second SOGIP workshop will address the central issue of indigenous land rights. Land claims have played a key role in the construction of the global indigenous movement. Indigenous Peoples’ relations to land and the natural environment are an important touchstone for the articulation of their dynamic contemporary identities, discourses and political engagements, particularly in the face of continuing processes of land alienation and exploitation. The inscription of past and present indigenous lives in specific landscapes has major implications for questions of contemporary land ownership, use and management, as well as for the conservation of biodiversity and culture. Indigenous rights to land and natural resources also constitute a significant point of articulation between Indigenous Peoples and national and international actors, legal systems, regulatory regimes and market economies. This workshop aims to generate insights into the changing ways in which global trends intersect with, influence and are influenced by local cases, through the lens of indigenous land rights.

PROGRAMMES

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SOGIP programme court Workshop 2 (PDF)
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SOGIP programme long Workshop 2 (PDF)

Speakers :

18 June 2013 – 15:00-17:00 – opening lecture

Arturo Escobar – University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Territories of Difference : The Political Ontology of ‘Rights to Land’

Venue : EHESS, 105 Boulevard Raspail, amphithéâtre François Furet, 75006 Paris

19 June 2013 – 8:30-18:00

Venue : EHESS, 96 Boulevard Raspail, salle Maurice et Denis Lombard, 75006 Paris

SESSION 1. LAND POLICY, COLLECTIVE RIGHTS AND TERRITORIAL RECOGNITION

8:30 : Welcome of participants
9:00 : General introduction : Irène Bellier – CNRS
Introduction : Stéphanie Guyon – Université de Picardie and Benoît Trépied–CNRS

9:30-11:00 : Brigitte Wyngaarde – President of ‘Villages de Guyane’
Caroline Desbiens – Université Laval and Irène Hirt – Université de Genève

11:30-13:00 : Brian Thom – University of Victoria (British Colombia, Canada)
Jon Altman – Australian National University

14:30-16:00 : Richard Chase Smith – Instituto del Bien Comun, Peru
Morita Carrasco – University of Buenos Aires

16:30-18:00 : Leonardo Tamburini – Center of Legal Studies and Social Research (CEJIS), Santa Cruz de la Sierra
Francisco Lopez Barcenas – Center of Studies for Rural Sustainable Development and Food Sovereignty, Chamber of Deputies, National Congress of the Union of Mexico

20 June 2013– 8:30-18:30

Venue : REID Hall, 4 rue de Chevreuse, salle de conférence, 3ème jardin, rez-de-chaussée, 75006 Paris

SESSION 2. LAND USE, MANAGEMENT POLICY AND THE CONSERVATION OF BIODIVERSITY AND CULTURE

8:30 : Welcome of participants

9:00 : Introduction : Leslie Cloud – Sorbonne nouvelle and Verónica González– Sorbonne nouvelle

9:30-11:00 : Justin Kenrick – Forest Peoples Programme
Oiara Bonilla – Federal University of Rio de Janeiro and
Artionka Capiberibe – Federal University of Sao Paulo

11:30-13:00 : Francesca Thornberry – Rainforest Foundation UK
Vital Bambanze – UNIPROBA ; IPACC ; Senate of the Republic of Burundi

14:30-16:00 : Robert Hitchcock – University of New Mexico, USA
Sarah Benabou – EHESS

16:30-18:30 : Mark Harris – La Trobe University/ University of London
Tuhiira Tucki Huke – Clan Tupahotu Riki Riki, Rapa Nui
Claire Charters – Auckland University Law School and
Andrew Erueti – Amnesty International.

21 June 2013– 8:30-18:00

Venue : REID Hall, 4 rue de Chevreuse, salle de conférence, 3ème jardin, rez-de-chaussée, 75006 Paris

SESSION 3. EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES : FROM CONFLICT TO PARTNERSHIP ?

8:30 : Welcome of participants

9:00 : Introduction : Rowena Dickins Morrison - EHESS and Jennifer Hays - EHESS
Presentation of report on mining and indigenous rights : Claire Levacher – EHESS

9:30-11:00 : James Suzman – Consulting group Anthropos, Cambridge, UK
Samuel Gorohouna – Université de la Nouvelle-Calédonie

11:30-13:00 : Christine Demmer – CNRS
Claire Levacher – EHESS

14:30-16:00 : Bryan Wyatt – National Native Title Council, Australia
Samarendra Das – Centre for World Environmental History, Sussex University

16:30-18:00 : Juan Luis Sariego –National School of Anthropology and History (Chihuahua Unity)
Natalya Ivanovna Novikova – Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology,
Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow

18:00 : Conclusion : Irène Bellier – CNRS

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