Indigenous Peoples’ Good Governance, Human Rights and Self-Determination in the Second Decade of the New Millennium – A Māori Perspective

Author
Producer
Māori Law Review
Year

This brief paper addresses the nexus between good governance, human rights and Indigenous peoples’ self-determination particularly from Articles 3-6 and 46 of the 2007 UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The paper is placed within a Māori good governance context with some broader discussion of the Pacific.

Native Nations
Resource Type
Topics
Citation

Joseph, Robert. "Indigenous Peoples’ Good Governance, Human Rights and Self-Determination in the Second Decade of the New Millennium — A Māori Perspective." MāoriLaw Review. December 2014. Article. (http://maorilawreview.co.nz/2014/12/indigenous-peoples-good-governance-h..., accessed July 25, 2023)

Related Resources

Thumbnail

In this interview, Māori barrister and Senior Lecturer at The University of Waikato Te Whare Wānanga o Waikato, Dr. Robert A. Joseph offers his expert analysis of governance and law through the historical perspective of Māori self-governance. Dr. Joseph gives a summary of the complexities…

Thumbnail

Jason is a Fulbright scholar in the US from August 2019 to January 2020 visiting the Native Nations Institute (Aug-Oct) at the University of Arizona and the Woods Institute for Environmental Policy at Stanford University (Oct-Jan). Jason is an Indigenous entrepreneurship researcher from Massey…