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61. Globalization And The United Nations
by the Members of the CSD indigenous peoples's Caucus invited partner of the DialogueSegment, for indigenous people View The Battle of bali, a report by Third
http://www.ifg.org/un.html

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UN and WSSD
Resources
The UN World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) For further resources about the WSSD see below
Download the program for the IFG event August 24th & 25th, " Which Way WSSD? "
Read a summary of the agreements reached so far (September 3, 2002) at Johannesburg by IFG's Environment Project Director Victor Menotti: Where To Go After Johannesburg? Cancun or Bust!
A brief overview
On August 26th to September 4th, 2002, the United Nations (UN) World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) is meeting in Johannesburg, South Africa. This ten-year retrospective of the 1992 Rio +10 summit is designed to "seek consensus on the general assessment of current conditions, and on priorities for further action in new areas or issues." UN planning sessions for the summit are now underway and it is already clear that the WSSD is not addressing in any substantial way the number one threat to the survival of the natural world - economic globalization. A decade after the Rio Earth Summit there is nearly unanimous agreement among participating countries and organizations that the outcome has been a failure. The Rio processes have not achieved any of their goals, and some of the most notable undertakings, as in the area of climate change, have been profoundly disappointing.

62. [GreenYes] Fwd CLIMATE JUSTICE PRINCIPLES RELEASED BY COALITION
from 5 continents, released the bali Principles of the rights of indigenous Peoplesand affected groundwork (South africa), indigenous Environmental Network
http://greenyes.grrn.org/2002/08/msg00129.html

63. Ethnography
from elaborate Hinduized civilizations (bali) and modern relationships between thevarious peoples of the that Indians forsake their indigenous religions and
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~anthro/courses/ethnography.html
ANTHROPOLOGY Home Anthropology at Dartmouth Directory of Courses... Introductory Ethnography Cultural Archaeology Biological Independent Study ... Anthropology Society
Ethnography
4. Peoples and Cultures of Native North America (Identical to Native American Studies 10)
Open to all classes. (ETHN) Dist: SOC; WCult: NW. Kan.
19. Ethnographic Film (Identical to, and described under, Film Studies 41)
25. The Land of the Totem Poles: Native Peoples of the Northwest Coast (Identical to Native American Studies 49)
With their complex social organization, elaborate ceremonies, fascinating mythology, and flamboyant "art," the indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast represent a truly unique "culture area" of Native North America. The course surveys several cultures of this region (from the coast of Oregon to southeastern Alaska), drawing upon early travelers' accounts, anthropological works, native testimony, artifacts from the Hood Museum of Art, and films. Lectures, class discussions, and student presentations will deal with the "classic" Northwest Coast cultures of the eighteenth and the nineteenth centuries as well as their modern versions. Open to all classes. (ETHN) Dist: SOC; WCult: NA. Kan.
26. Tribes, Kingdoms, and Nation-States: An Introduction to Southeast Asia (Identical to Asian and Middle Eastern Studies 16)

64. Earth Love Fund - Conservation Projects
to compile national laws pertaining to indigenous peoples, publish a In bali, Indonesia,a grant to the Environmental ELF has supported an indigenous centre in
http://www.unisong.com/elf/projects.htm
ARTISTS
FOR THE
ENVIRONMENT PROJECTS AROUND THE WORLD SUPPORTED BY
EARTH LOVE FUND Protecting Forests
In Ecuador , ELF has supported a family of shamans (indigenous healers), who are the traditional custodians of a sacred mountain, to formalise their custodianship in law and set up a National Park. In Tambopata, Peru , funding enabled an indigenous community to continue development of a cultural centre on an area of protected forest for which they are custodians. In Bolivia and India , grants have been given to enable indigenous communities to form teams of forest guards, to protect the forests where they live from further colonisation and logging. At Mount Kilum in Cameroon , a site originally identified as a conservation priority for a rare bird species has been set up as a forest reserve which local communities value for the protection of the watershed and for products such as honey, animal fodder and firewood. In one of the few remaining forests in Thailand , Earth Love Fund has helped a group of Forest Monks to work with their local communities in setting up community forest areas. In the Philippines , ELF has contributed through the World Land Trust and the Philippines Reef and Rainforest Community Project towards community education on the importance of marine and forest reserves to maintain fish stocks and forest resources.

65. References -- Working With Indigenous Knowledge
toward traditional resource rights for indigenous peoples and local rural appraisalto access indigenous knowledge and study of Dusun Pausan, bali, Indonesia.
http://www.idrc.ca/books/847/Refs.html
IDRC Resources Books Catalogue ...
Working with Indigenous Knowledge
References
Abbink, J. 1995. Medicinal and ritual plants of the Ethiopian Southwest: an account of recent research. Indigenous Knowledge and Development Monitor, 3(2). Online: http://www.nufficcs.nl/ciran/ikdm/. Adugna, G. 1996. The dynamics of knowledge systems vs. sustainable development: a sequel to the debate. Indigenous Knowledge and Development Monitor, 4(2). Online: http://www.nufficcs.nl/ciran/ikdm/. Agrawal, A. 1993. Removing ropes, attaching strings: institutional arrangements to provide water. Indigenous Knowledge and Development Monitor, 1(3). Online: http://www.nufficcs.nl/ciran/ikdm/. Appleton, H.E.; Hill, C.L.M. 1995. Gender and indigenous knowledge in various organizations. Indigenous Knowledge and Development Monitor, 2(3). Online: http://www.nufficcs.nl/ciran/ikdm/. Baines, G.; Hviding, E. 1992. Traditional environmental knowledge from the Marovo area of the Solomon Islands. In Barker, R.; Cross, N. 1992. Documenting oral history in the African Sahel. In Benfer, R.A., Jr; Furbee, L. 1996. Can indigenous knowledge be brokered without scientific understanding of the community structure and distribution of that knowledge? A sequel to the debate (8). Indigenous Knowledge and Development Monitor, 4(2). Online: http://www.nufficcs.nl/ciran/ikdm/.

66. Update 2
second in GLOBE Southern africa's Global Governance Fourth preparatory meeting inBali, MultiStakeholder indigenous peoples The multi-stake holder discussions
http://www.globesa.org/governance/update2.html
GLOBAL GOVERNANCE UPDATES
UPDATE 1
UPDATE 2 UPDATE 3 UPDATE 4 In this issue:
What happened in Bali?

What major groups think about governance

Governing sustainable development - the next steps

UNEP global report
...
Ratification update

Update 2: Bali and Beyond Introduction This update, the second in GLOBE Southern Africa's Global Governance Programme, features a ratification update, takes a look at what happened in Bali, gets the views on governance from various major groups, looks at the way forward for governing sustainable development and targets nine principles for better governance.
What happened in Bali? This report from the Earth negotiations bulletin of the International Institute for Sustainable Development provides a details summary of the negotiations that took place in Bali on the issue of the Institutional Framework for Sustainable Development Governance. A full report on the Bali Preparatory meetings is available from the IISD at www.iisd.ca

67. URI Global Charter Signing And Summit 2000
a revered Gandhian from bali, Indonesia, culminated heal the relationship betweenindigenous peoples and people ancestors sought to destroy indigenous culture.
http://www.endtimeinfo.net/religion/close.html
URI Global Charter
Signing and Summit 2000 by Executive Director of URI, Rev.Cn.Charles Gibbs
www.united-religions.org
"If the religions of the world ever stop killing each other, it will be in large measure because of
what happened today in Pittsburgh." These words, broadcast by a San Francisco radio station on June 26, 2000, announced the
birth of the United Religions Initiative to an estimated 100,000 listeners. On that day, fifty-five
years after the signing of the United Nations Charter, 300 people in religious and cultural dress
from 39 spiritual traditions from 44 countries gathered at the Carnegie Music Hall in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania to sign the URI Charter, which begins: We, people of diverse religions, spiritual expressions and indigenous traditions throughout the
world, hereby establish the United Religions Initiative to promote enduring, daily interfaith
cooperation, to end religiously motivated violence, and to create cultures of peace, justice and

68. Choike : Environment .
and increasingly in Southern africa, through assisting Malaysia, such as supportingindigenous peoples against deforestation 2002 The Battle of bali Last stop
http://www.chasque.net/frontpage/choike/links/21/
Home People Society Environment ... En Español Choike: A Portal on Southern Civil Societies Home : Environment our directory NGO sites document.write(''); document.write('People'); document.write(description[0] + codigo[0]); document.write('Society'); document.write(description[1] + codigo[0]); document.write('Environment'); document.write(description[2] + codigo[0]); document.write('Communication'); document.write(description[3] + codigo[0]); document.write('Globalization'); document.write(description[4] + codigo[0]); document.write(''); recommended web sites Environment groundWork A non-profit environmental justice service and developmental organization, groundWork seeks to improve the quality of life of vulnerable people in South Africa, and increasingly in Southern Africa, through assisting civil society to have a greater impact on environmental governance.
Sahabat Alam Malaysia (SAM)
SAM is a grassroots, community NGO involved in environment and development issues. SAM has worked closely with numerous affected communities throughout Malaysia, such as supporting indigenous peoples against deforestation, or villagers against the illegal production of radioactive substances in their land. SAM is also the coordinator of the Asia-Pacific People's Environment Network (APPEN). Malaysia.

69. FPP Web Page2
and communities in Latin America, africa and Asia. into the text negotiated at Baliand that as a useful reference tool for indigenous peoples, civil society
http://forestpeoples.gn.apc.org/Briefings/Indigenous Rights/ip_rights_land_&_res
INDIGENOUS AND TRIBAL PEOPLES’ RIGHTS TO LANDS, TERRITORIES AND RESOURCES INTERNATIONAL INSTRUMENTS AND COMMITMENTS, 1989 - 2002 THE COLLABORATING INSTITUTIONS THE POPULAR COALITION TO ERADICATE HUNGER AND POVERTY THE FOREST PEOPLES PROGRAMME The Popular Coalition is a global consortium of intergovernmental, civil society and bilateral organisations committed to the empowerment of the rural poor. It believes that empowerment can best be achieved through increasing the access of the poor to productive assets, especially land, water and common property resources, and direct participation in decision-making processes at local, national, regional and international levels. Since the Eighth Session of the Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD 8) held in April 2000, the Popular Coalition has been working closely with Major Groups of the Multi-Stakeholder Dialogue (MSD) which led to an ongoing and active process of engaging key major group representatives from women, indigenous, farmers, agricultural workers, trade union and youth to work together to shape policies and practices on Access to Land.

70. Newsletter Issue 2:
At bali, countries agreed to strongly reaffirm and “Sustainable Development forAfrica.” Two specific business and industry, and indigenous peoples in a
http://www.africabio.com/wssd/2.htm
AfricaBio Issue 2 – June 2002 This Newsletter is intended as a forum for information exchange and dialogue in the build-up to the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD). Forthcoming issues will focus on major issues on the agenda of the nine major groups involved and other relevant issues as they arise Outcomes of PrepCom IV Outcomes of PrepCom IV As part of the global preparations for the WSSD, the fourth and final PrepCom meeting was held 27 May – 7 June in Bali, Indonesia. The overall aim of this PrepCom was to decide on what action will be undertaken and this consisted of two parts - Firstly: high-level negotiations resulted in agreement on three-quarters of the Plan of Implementation document (plan of action) for the WSSD. Text that was not finalised must be resolved at the WSSD, and it is hoped that agreed text is not renegotiated. The meeting was felt to be disappointing and highlighted major differences which must be overcome at the WSSD for it to be a success and for sustainable development to be a reality. A multi-stakeholder dialogue was also held, involving the nine major groups, governments and international organisations, to exchange perspectives on key issues of the action plan, including sustainable development governance, capacity building, partnerships and future priorities. Within the draft Plan of Implementation for the WSSD, countries agreed on a host of actions needed to improve living conditions for billions of people and to protect the environment. What they could not agree upon is a range of provisions concerning time-bound targets and the means of implementation for the programme of action, including trade and finance issues. Some countries called for new targets and timetables for issues such as sanitation, renewable energy and restoring fish stocks, while others want outstanding targets and timetables to be met. The term "

71. La Culture Camerounaise
artifacts of the Bamileke, Nso and balinyonga peoples Stuttgart 1987) used the word indigenous to speak of and thus to identify the peoples who occupied and
http://www.spm.gov.cm/cameroun/culture/cam_culture_a.htm
Cultural Cameroon Dance Fables Dishes Music ... Art THE CAMEROON CULTURE The microcosm of Africa's culture Cameroon has rightly been described as the "microcosm" of Africa. On its territory are found cohabiting, mingling and intermingling all the major cultures and traditions of sub-Saharan Africa, namely:
  • the Bantu cultures of the forest, highland and great lakes regions, not leaving out those of southern Africa etc, the Sudano-Sahelian cultures of the grassfield savannas, the Adamawa plateaux, the sandy plains and hot regions of the Sahel as well as all the intermediate varieties or "shades" such as the nomadic and pygmy cultures.
A quick overview of Cameroon's cultural landscape sprawling from the Atlantic coast to Lake Chad makes it possible to distinguish and better highlight a number of major cultural spheres, each with its own original and specific features. These include the coastal region, the Bantu forest region, the grassfields and the northern region. The coastal or sawa culture Cameroon's coast stretches over close to 400km from Rio del Rey on the western border with Nigeria to Campo near the border with Gabon and Equatorial Guinea and is inhabited by such peoples as the Dualas, Bakweris, Bakokos and Batangas all of whom belong to the coastal Sawa Culture.

72. Rio-plus-10.org
on the eve of the bali Preparatory Committee Australia eThekwini ECOPEACE, SouthAfrica Energy Club Flemish Support Group for indigenous peoples, Belgium Le
http://www.rio-plus-10.org/en/positions/35.php
Home News Info Action ... 28-Aug-02 FoEI V. Towards Sustainable Economies You are here: Home / Positions Save Multilateral Env. Agreements from the WTO!
NGOs from all over the world have signed this statement before the PrepComm for World Summit for Sustainable Development (Bali, 24 May-7 June 2002)!
A mass of NGOs has supported and signed on to a statement directed at the World Summit for Sustainable Development. The statement calls on governments to reaffirm in Johannesburg the authority and autonomy of MEAs and to state explicitly that Multilateral Environmental Agreements must not be undermined by World Trade Organisation rules.
The statement has been launched on the eve of the Bali Preparatory Committee Meeting for the World Summit for Sustainable Development (27 May-7 June 2002). It has been issued by a group including Friends of the Earth International, Greenpeace International, Third World Network, ANPED, Sierra Club and WWF International at the last PrepComm in March.
Civil society statement:
JOHANNESBURG EARTH SUMMIT MUST AGREE THAT THE
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION (WTO) RULES WILL
RESPECT MULTILATERAL ENVIRONMENTAL AGREEMENTS (MEAs)
Why is there concern?

73. People
West africa (Sierra Leone), North africa and Egypt between museums, their public andindigenous peoples, and in SouthEast Asia and Indonesia (bali) and Europe
http://www.socanth.cam.ac.uk/people.htm
The People in the Department of Social Anthropology
Staff members and their research interests
Haddon in his office in Cambridge Photo taken from the article by Sandra Rouse in the Cambridge Anthropology Journal celebrating the centenary of the expedition to the Torres Strait.
  • Professor Caroline Humphrey (King's) has carried out research in Siberia and Mongolia in the Soviet and post-Soviet periods, and she has also worked in India, Nepal and China (Inner Mongolia and Manchuria). Her research interests include shamanism, theories of ritual, and socialist/post-socialist economy and society. Her current research interests include pastoralism and comparative studies of the relation between culture and the environment.
    (e-mail: ch10001@cam.ac.uk Professor Alan Macfarlane (King's) works in England, Japan, and Nepal, and he also has research interests in Burma and India. He has done research on English society of the fourteenth to nineteenth centuries, on the Gurungs of Central Nepal, and on the Nagas of the Burma-India border. He is interested in information retrieval systems and audio-visual media. His ongoing research includes the origins and consequences of capitalism in comparative perspective, individualism, and social theory.
    (e-mail: am12@cus.cam.ac.uk

74. Indymedia - News - Aotearoa Independent Media Centre (AIMC)
It encompasses farmers, squatters, indigenous peoples, anticapitalists, anti-roadscampaigners, radical ecologists WAR, TERRORISM AND bali BOMB, Oct 15 2002.
http://docs.indymedia.org/twiki/pub/Aotearoa/WishList/indymedia_alt.html
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instantly upload your audio, video, photo or text directly from your browser Get involved! Join our email list or contact your nearest group. A-IMC Documents Editorial policy HTML for Indy tutorial Media Centres www.indymedia.org IMC Projects satellite tv news print radio video ... climate IMC Pacific adelaide aotearoa brisbane jakarta ... sydney Africa nigeria south africa Europe austria athens barcelona belgium ... united kingdom Canada alberta hamilton maritimes montreal ... windsor Latin America argentina bolivia brasil chiapas ... tijuana South Asia india mumbai Western Asia israel jerusalem United States arizona atlanta austin baltimore ... danbury, ct

75. Biowatch SA - WSSD Main Page
International Civil Society NGOs, CBOs, traditional healers, indigenous peoples,women’s The Spice of Life at the peoples Earth Summit Declaration for bali.
http://www.biowatch.org.za/wssd.htm
World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD)
Second South-South Biopiracy Summit
“BIOPIRACY - Ten Years Post-Rio”
Johannesburg Declaration on Biopiracy, Biodiversity and Community Rights , found on our website. All speakers factsheets are also on our website.
If you need any further information, please do not hesitate to contact Biowatch at biowatch@mweb.co.za
Proceedings
The full proceedings from the Biopiracy Summit are now available; click here to download (213K zipped Word file).
Keynote Addresses
  • 22 August 2002: DAY 1 Opening Keynote Address by Dr Tewolde Berhan Egziabher , Institute for Sustainable Development, Ethiopia. “The Making of a Biopirate” 22 August 2002: DAY 1 Keynote Address by Martin Khor , Third World Network, Malaysia. “Recent Developments in WTO and TRIPS on Patenting of Life and Biopiracy Issues” 23 August 2002: DAY 2 Opening Keynote Address by Dr Vandana Shiva , Navdanya, India. “Conserving Biodiversity and Defending Community Rights the Way Forward”
  • List of Delegates
    A comprehensive list of all speakers and participants with contact details.
    Programme and Speakers’ Factsheets
    Click here for a detailed programme for this event, including speakers’ factsheets.

    76. Dialogue Between Nations -- Kari-Oca
    on Assignment in South africa SPECIAL REPORTS on Sustainable Development and IndigenousPeoples' Right of Political Declaration Indonesia, bali, 6 June 2002.
    http://www.dialoguebetweennations.com/IR/english/KariOcaKimberley/intro.html
    From Kari-Oca to Kimberley
    Beatriz Painiqueo
    Mapuche
    Signing the Kari-Oca Declaration KARI-OCA
    World Conference of Indigenous Peoples on Territory, Environment and Development and the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) Kari-Oca and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1992
    Kari-Oca Introduction Kari-Oca Press Release, June, 1992 Kari-Oca Communications Events Kari-Oca Declaration and Indigenous People's Earth Charter Introduction ... Kari-Oca at UNCED
    KIMBERLEY
    Indigenous Peoples' International Summit on Sustainable Development and the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) Kimberley and Johannesburg, South Africa, August 20 - September 4, 2002 We reaffirm the vital role of the Indigenous
    Peoples in sustainable development
    Kimberley Introduction The Kimberley Declaration Indigenous Peoples' Plan of Implementation on Sustainable Development
    Yusif Ali on Assignment in South Africa
    SPECIAL REPORTS:
    Editorial The United Nations World Summit on Sustainable Development and Indigenous Peoples' Right of Self-Determination Natalie Drache Producer, dbn.tv

    77. Footprint Titles - South American Handbook 2003
    Whatever its true origin, the traditional consumption of coca remains an importantsymbol of ethnic identity for the indigenous peoples of the South American
    http://www.footprintbooks.com/destinations/destinations_book.asp?groupID=13&book

    78. ET Final Report On WSSD
    1. Planned prior to bali and sponsored by the spoke of the struggles of the IndigenousPeoples of Cochabamba people from Alexandra in South africa just an
    http://www.wcc-coe.org/wcc/what/jpc/wrapup.html
    Ecumenical Team (ET) involvement in the 4th PrepCom for the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) Johannesburg WRAP-UP REPORT
    Bali, Indonesia, 27 May -7 June, 2002 Participants in the 4th and final PrepCom before the World Summit on Sustainable Development gathered on the beautiful, spirit-filled island of Bali, Indonesia. The climate was tropical, the Balinese people were gracious and welcoming. The venue for the meeting was sumptuous. The irony of meeting in a place of such opulence to look for ways to wipe out the scourge of poverty was not lost on many who gathered. I SUMMARY OF THE TWO WEEKS 1. The Meeting: The task of the meeting was to continue negotiation on the Revised Chairman’s Paper that began during the informal consultations that preceded PrepCom IV. After the plenary session the work was divided between 3 working groups.
    Working Group I dealt with the introduction; poverty eradication; changing unsustainable patterns of consumption and production; protection and management of the natural resource base for economic and social development.
    Working Group II continued its work on sustainable development in a globalising world; health and sustainable development; Small Island Developing States; Africa; means of implementation.

    79. UN News Update - UNIS Vienna - May 2002
    SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TO BE HELD IN bali, 7 MAY IN STRUGGLE FOR RIGHTS OF INDIGENOUSPEOPLES, SAYS DEPUTY MINISTERS ADOPT DRUG CONTROL ACTION PLAN FOR africa.
    http://www.unis.unvienna.org/en/news/2002/may.shtml
    UN News Update - May 2002 UNIS/CP/412 - 31 May
    VIENNA SYMPOSIUM ON THE UNITED NATIONS' CONTRIBUTION TO COMBATING INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM PI/1423 - 31 MAY
    UN INSTITUTE FOR TRAINING AND RESEARCH, INTEL CORPORATION PARTNERS IN INITIATIVE TO BRIDGE DIGITAL DIVIDE SC/7418 - 31 May
    SECURITY COUNCIL EXTENDS FORCE MONITORING ISRAEL-SYRIA DISENGAGEMENT UNTIL 31 DECEMBER, UNANIMOUSLY ADOPTING RESOLUTION 1415 (20020 Note No 191 – 30 May
    FINAL NEGOTIATIONS FOR JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT OPEN IN BALI; OUTCOME WILL DETERMINE ACTION FOR SUSTAINABLE FUTURE SC/7417 - 30 May
    PRESS RELEASE BY SECURITY COUNCIL COMMITTEE ESTABLISHED PURSUANT TO RESOLUTION 751 (1992) SC/7416 - 30 May
    PRESS STATEMENT BY SECURITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT ON ERITREA AND ETHIOPIA SG/SM/8250 - 29 May
    UN, WELCOMING COLOMBIA'S ELECTIONS, WILL EXAMINE 'WITH CARE AND INTEREST' PRESIDENT-ELECT'S PROPOSALS FOR UN ROLE IN NEW PEACE EFFORTS UNIS/BIO/641 – 29 May
    ANTONIO MARIA COSTA, DIRECTOR GENERAL OF UN OFFICE AT VIENNA, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF DRUG CONTROL AND CRIME PREVENTION OFFICE Note No 190 – 29 May
    HIGHLIGHTS FROM RECENT STATEMENTS BY ANTONIO MARIA COSTA, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE UNITED NATIONS OFFICE FOR DRUG CONTROL AND CRIME PREVENTION

    80. The World Bank - NGOs
    region will take place in bali, Indonesia March about the WB's work with indigenouspeoples, please visit World Bank's Regional Departments africa a. Strategic
    http://lnweb18.worldbank.org/essd/essd.nsf/All/79ECC4F053FC2E0685256CBF0001D3E4?

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