PRESS RELEASE October 20, 2008
M I T C E N T E R F O R I N T E R N A T I O N A L S T U D I E S
Contact:
Michelle Nhuch
617.253.1965
nhuch@MIT.EDU
Indigenous Groups Face Extinction, a MIT Study Reports
Human rights program at MIT seeks to create
a global initiative to assist First Nations
CAMBRIDGE, MA October 20, 2008—Indigenous peoples have lived in the
same territories for hundreds of years and attempted to preserve, generation after
generation, traditional and cultural practices. Today, however, control of their land is
being taken away, as mining and oil extraction, intensive cattle ranching, shrimp and crop
farming, timber production, and other unsustainable uses of their land are being allocated
to global corporate interests. In some instances, they are being forced off their land
entirely. If ties to their ancestral lands are cut, a recent MIT study reports, their survival is
in jeopardy.
The MIT study explores fourteen cases in which the land claims of indigenous societies
on six continents are being contested. "We found that land and the control of land is
essential to the survival of First Nations. Taking away their land or forcing them to
integrate into the dominant society is equivalent to destroying these cultures," said
Lawrence Susskind, senior author of the study.
Susskind is a Ford Professor of Urban and Environmental Planning at MIT, director of
the Public Disputes Program at Harvard Law School, and founder of the Consensus
Building Institute. The study was co-edited by Isabelle Anguelovski, a doctoral candidate
in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at MIT.
Although international law supports the rights of First Nations, the study finds that
international law often fails to help them retain control of their land and natural
resources. For example, when gas reserves or minerals lie under the land of a First
Nation, national governments can take control of the area (by declaring it a public utility),
even when national constitutions protect the right of indigenous people. States then
allocate extraction concessions to public or private corporations, often without the
consent of the indigenous communities, leading to long-lasting negative environmental,
social, and cultural impacts.
The study identifies clear winners and losers, depending on how the land claims of
indigenous people are addressed. First Nations with support from international civil
society seem to fair better than most of those who have to pursue their claims on their
own. For indigenous peoples relying entirely on international legal assistance, however, the results are disappointing. Corporations and national governments have the time and
money to delay lawsuits while indigenous communities do not have time or resources to
dedicate to years of litigation. Civil society networks, in conjunction with strong
leadership within indigenous groups, can support political action that is often more
effective than appeals to international law, the study finds.
"It took the United Nations a long time to formally recognize the rights of First Nations.
Even now, however, broad statements of support don't translate into real protection. We
don't have much time; indigenous cultures are disappearing. We need to do something
now," said Anguelovski.
Susskind and the University's Program on Human Rights and Justice—an initiative of the
Center for International Studies (CIS) and the Department of Urban Studies at MIT—have
called for the creation of a global network of scholars to document the status of
indigenous peoples and to develop a credo spelling out the extent to which the survival of
indigenous communities depends on the extent to which they exercise control over their
land and what happens within their borders. The study details the preconditions for
effective resolution of the land claims of First Nations. The ultimate goal, Susskind says,
is to link with other groups of scholars to provide capacity-building assistance to First
Nations.
The study is available online at the CIS Program on Human Rights and Justice Web site
The study was prepared by graduate students from MIT, Harvard Law School and the
Fletcher School of Diplomacy at Tufts University enrolled in Professor Susskind's
course: Addressing the Land Claims of Indigenous Peoples. Co-authors include: Summer
Austin, Talia Berman-Kishony, Shunling Chen, Artur Demchuk, Andrea Glen, Autumn
Graham, Shizuka Hashimoto, Jonathan Kaufman, J. Eric Kent, Steven Lewis, Maria
Reyes, Alexis Schulman, Jessica Tucker-Mohl, and Katherine Wallace.
Program on Human Rights and Justice at MIT:
The MIT Program on Human Rights and Justice (PHRJ), is a collaborative effort between
the Center for International Studies and the Department of Urban Studies and Planning.
Established in 2001, the Program on Human Rights and Justice aims to create a cutting edge inter-disciplinary environment for research, teaching, curricular development and real-world application in human rights, especially relating to the global economy and
science and technology. It is the first human rights program in a leading technology
school and the first in the world with a specific focus on the human rights aspects of
economic, scientific and technological developments. Cross-cultural dimensions of
human welfare, security and dignity animate all the activities of the Program.