Beyond numbers: the participation of indigenous peoples in parliament
This report examines the extent to which indigenous peoples are participating meaningfully in external decision-making processes through parliamentary structures. It is based on a survey of countries known to have indigenous populations (26 of 77 parliaments participated), as well as on secondary da...
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Format: | 9-2014 |
Language: | Eng |
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9-20
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/11742/23615 |
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author | Inter-Parliamentary Union Inter-Parliamentary Union |
author_facet | Inter-Parliamentary Union Inter-Parliamentary Union |
author_sort | Inter-Parliamentary Union |
collection | DSpaceTVQH |
description | This report examines the extent to which indigenous peoples are participating meaningfully in external decision-making processes through parliamentary structures. It is based on a survey of countries known to have indigenous populations (26 of 77 parliaments participated), as well as on secondary data for another 10 parliaments.1 Because of the relatively limited data available, the report seeks not to quantify, but to provide a deeper understanding of indigenous peoples’ participation in parliaments. It analyzes the data against other research findings about their political participation as well as external variables, such as the kind of electoral system in place in each country. |
format | 9-2014 |
id | oai:http:--thuvienso.quochoi.vn:11742-23615 |
institution | Thư viện số |
language | Eng |
publishDate | 9-20 |
record_format | dspace |
spelling | oai:http:--thuvienso.quochoi.vn:11742-236152017-09-06T02:30:47Z Beyond numbers: the participation of indigenous peoples in parliament Inter-Parliamentary Union Inter-Parliamentary Union Indigenous peoples Indigenous rights, Parliament Representation Parliamentary action This report examines the extent to which indigenous peoples are participating meaningfully in external decision-making processes through parliamentary structures. It is based on a survey of countries known to have indigenous populations (26 of 77 parliaments participated), as well as on secondary data for another 10 parliaments.1 Because of the relatively limited data available, the report seeks not to quantify, but to provide a deeper understanding of indigenous peoples’ participation in parliaments. It analyzes the data against other research findings about their political participation as well as external variables, such as the kind of electoral system in place in each country. 9-2014 2014 9-2014 http://hdl.handle.net/11742/23615 Eng pdf application/pdf IPU |
spellingShingle | Indigenous peoples Indigenous rights, Parliament Representation Parliamentary action Inter-Parliamentary Union Inter-Parliamentary Union Beyond numbers: the participation of indigenous peoples in parliament |
title | Beyond numbers: the participation of indigenous peoples in parliament |
title_full | Beyond numbers: the participation of indigenous peoples in parliament |
title_fullStr | Beyond numbers: the participation of indigenous peoples in parliament |
title_full_unstemmed | Beyond numbers: the participation of indigenous peoples in parliament |
title_short | Beyond numbers: the participation of indigenous peoples in parliament |
title_sort | beyond numbers the participation of indigenous peoples in parliament |
topic | Indigenous peoples Indigenous rights, Parliament Representation Parliamentary action |
url | http://hdl.handle.net/11742/23615 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT interparliamentaryunion beyondnumberstheparticipationofindigenouspeoplesinparliament AT interparliamentaryunion beyondnumberstheparticipationofindigenouspeoplesinparliament |