Who is Indigenous? 'Peoplehood' and Ethnonationalist Approaches to Rearticulating Indigenous Identity
by Jeff J. Corntassel
by Jeff J. Corntassel
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91nep04.qxd 13/08/2003 15:53 Page 100<br />
100 NATIONALISM <strong>and</strong> ETHNIC POLITICS<br />
76. Lionel Caplan, ‘Tribes in the Ethnography of Nepal: Some Comments on a Debate’,<br />
Nepalese Studies, No.17 (1990), <strong>and</strong> cited in Erica-Irene A. Daes, 11 June 2001,<br />
‘<strong>Indigenous</strong> Peoples <strong>and</strong> their Relationship <strong>to</strong> L<strong>and</strong>’.<br />
77. Cindy L. Holder <strong>and</strong> Jeff J. Corntassel, ‘<strong>Indigenous</strong> Peoples <strong>and</strong> Multicultural Citizenship:<br />
Bridging Collective <strong>and</strong> Individual Rights’, Human Rights Quarterly, No.24 (2002),<br />
pp.127–51.<br />
78. Kingsbury, ‘’<strong>Indigenous</strong> Peoples’, p.414.<br />
79. United Nations Comm<strong>is</strong>sion on Human Rights, 22 June 1999, Study on Treaties,<br />
Agreements <strong>and</strong> Other Constructive Arrangements between States <strong>and</strong> <strong>Indigenous</strong><br />
Populations: inal Report by Miguel Alfonso Martinez, Special Rapporteur.<br />
E/CN.4/Sub.2/1999/20. See pp.12–15.