TY - BOOK AU - Ndahinda,Felix Mukwiza ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Indigenousness in Africa: A Contested Legal Framework for Empowerment of 'Marginalized' Communities SN - 9789067046091 AV - K3150 U1 - 342 23 PY - 2011/// CY - The Hague, The Netherlands PB - T. M. C. Asser Press KW - Law KW - Public law KW - Public Law N2 - Following the internationalisation of the indigenous rights movement, a growing number of African hunter-gatherers, pastoralists and other communities have adopted indigenousness in claiming special legal protection. Their legal claims as the indigenous peoples of Africa are backed by many international actors such as indigenous rights activists, donors and scholars. However, indigenous identification is resisted by many African governments, some community members and some anthropologists. Felix Mukwiza Ndahinda explores the sources of indigenous identification in Africa and its legal and political implications. Noting the limitations of systematic and discursive, as opposed to activist, studies, it questions the appropriateness of this framework in efforts aimed at empowering claimant communities in inherently multiethnic African countries and adopts an interdisciplinary approach in order to capture the indigenous rights phenomenon in Africa UR - http://148.231.10.114:2048/login?url=http://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-90-6704-609-1 ER -