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- Title
Becoming indigenous in the pursuit of justice: The African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights and the Endorois.
- Authors
Lynch, Gabrielle
- Abstract
The February 2010 ruling of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights on the Kenyan government's violation of the Endorois people’s rights is the Commission's most substantive and radical decision to date, with important implications for international jurisprudence, national politics, and local strategies – as well as potential socio-economic realities and inter-communal relations. The ruling combined a liberal interpretation of the African Charter with far-reaching recommendations and the request for a government progress report. It was the first time that the Commission had decided on and extended individual and peoples' rights to indigenous people, and is the first time in the world that a specific right to development has been adjudicated upon. By accepting the Endorois as an indigenous community the decision completes a process of ethnic invention that began in the 1990s, and has seen Endorois assert ethnic difference from their Kalenjin neighbours as a strategy of legal argument. The outcome is a victory for Endorois leaders and may help other communities tackle state injustice. However, the broad implications for social justice and inter-communal relations are contentious given the decision's reinforcement of an inherently exclusive sense of ethnic territoriality and neglect of gross inequalities in wealth and power. From this perspective, the decision reflects a modern obsession with the ‘politics of recognition’ to the neglect of a ‘politics of redistribution’.
- Subjects
KENYA; AFRICAN Commission on Human &; Peoples' Rights; ENDOROIS (African people); ETHNOLOGY; KALENJIN (African people); GROUP identity; HUMAN rights advocacy; INDIGENOUS peoples; SOCIAL justice; ETHNIC relations
- Publication
African Affairs, 2012, Vol 111, Issue 442, p24
- ISSN
0001-9909
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/afraf/adr063