In finding that Australia had not
allowed effective participation by Indigenous people in the formulation of the amendments to the NTA, the CERD Committee was concerned that the power to approve or disapprove of the legislation was not appropriately located with Indigenous people whose rights were directly affected by it.
In finding that Australia had not
allowed effective participation by Indigenous people in the formulation of the amendments to the NTA, the Committee was concerned that the power to approve or disapprove of the legislation was not appropriately located with Indigenous people whose rights were directly affected by it.
Governments have avoided the right to negotiate through the blanket application of expedited procedure statement to section 29 notices, combined with the absence of other processes
allowing effective participation of native title holders in administration of mining future acts.
Not exact matches
Her interactive exercises, «rewards» for audience
participation, storytelling, and posed questions
allowed both mothers and daughters to open up in a non threatening environment using
effective communication tools in a fun and exciting way.
However, the 2006 Odisha R & R policy in the clause 207
allows «
effective participation of the displaced communities in the process.»
Opportunities for legitimate, peripheral
participation must also
allow teacher candidates to adapt practices of writing teaching to complex and varied situations, since formulaic strategies for a task like responding to student writing are not
effective in all contexts.
The UN-REDD Programme's 2016 - 2020 governance arrangements
allow for the full and
effective participation of all UN-REDD Programme stakeholders — partner countries, donors, indigenous peoples, civil society organizations, participating UN agencies — while ensuring streamlined decision - making processes and clear lines of accountability.
The frustrations of the system and the lack of
participation by the litigants in the Courtroom makes mediation an alternative that is both cost
effective and in the end
allows you to help craft and write your own story.
They
allow for individual native title groups, government and industry to negotiate agreements that are appropriate to their circumstances and which respect Indigenous peoples» rights to
effective participation in decisions affecting themselves, their lands and territories.
Frameworks for engagement should
allow for the full and
effective participation of indigenous peoples in the design, negot iation, implementation, monitoring, evaluation and assessment of outcomes;
This
allows for the exercise of the right to
effective participation and the right to self - determination.
These Pro forma deeds offer another example of negotiated agreements that have proceeded with the
effective participation of Indigenous groups and have successfully negotiated outcomes that
allow for the expeditious administration of native title and mineral tenements without undermining rights conferred under the NTA.
While some of these reviews
allowed extensive consultation with Indigenous people, they did not amount to
effective participation which includes the prior and informed consent of Indigenous people to the policy goals adopted, their implementation and their evaluation.
Where non-Indigenous NTRBs provide services, possible credibility problems arise leading to «real conflict between directors, members and the NTRBs clients».11 Further, the provision of control of Indigenous corporations «provides a model of Indigenous
participation in decision - making which also
allows for the exercise of the right to
effective participation and the right to self - determination.»
[101] Broadly, the future act provisions and rights of decision making
allow for the opportunity of native title holders to exercise rights of self determination and
effective participation.
Frameworks for engagement should
allow for the full and
effective participation of indigenous peoples in the design, negotiation, implementation, monitoring, evaluation and assessment of outcomes.
To the extent that the right to negotiate
allows this, it is also an expression of the internationally recognised human rights principle that Indigenous people have the right to
effective participation in the development of their traditional lands.
Design, negotiation, implementation, monitoring, and evaluation — whereby frameworks for engagement should
allow for the full and
effective participation of indigenous peoples in the design, negotiation, implementation, monitoring, evaluation and assessment of outcomes; and where indigenous peoples and communities should be invited to participate in identifying and prioritizing objectives, as well as in establishing targets and benchmarks (in the short and long term).