Free Prior Informed Consent (FPIC)

Indigenous Peoples all over the world have been demanding the recognition of their rights to maintain and develop their cultural heritage and, more particularly, their land for many years. There have been debates over the definition of who is indigenous and what it means, over treaty rights and free, prior, and informed consent.

They have done this through many bodies, including the United Nations, where there is both a UN Working Group on Indigenous Peoples and a newly constituted UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Peoples. Also within the UN there has been an ongoing debate to finalise a Draft Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. There have been a number of associated international bodies where Indigenous Peoples have struggled to have their voices heard, including the Convention on BioDiversity, the World Trade Organisation and the International Union for the Conservation of Nature.

Joint statement on extractive industries at EMRIP

Letter on Obstacles to Participation in World Bank Safeguards Consultations

Australia: Who Gets To Develop James Price Point?

The mining onslaught in native communities

British Beowulf reported again for breach of Swedish Minerals Act

Cameroon REDD Community Consultations and Civil Society Workshop

Vedanta - Angry Protests in India, Africa and London

Safeguard People and the Planet, Not Corporate Profit and Human Rights Abuses

Resolution from the 2nd Barents Indigenous Peoples’ Congress 2012

Researcher(s) required for project on indigenous rights and mining

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