Here is the webcast of Idaho’s Bellwood Lecture featuring Larry Echohawk, Lawrence Baca, and Rebecca Tsosie.
Vodpod videos no longer available.
Here is the webcast of Idaho’s Bellwood Lecture featuring Larry Echohawk, Lawrence Baca, and Rebecca Tsosie.
Vodpod videos no longer available.
Rebecca Tsosie has posted several of her past articles on SSRN:
Challenges to Sacred Sites Protection
Denver University Law Review, Vol. 83, p. 963, 2006
Rebecca A. Tsosie
Arizona State University – College of Law
Date Posted: May 7, 2009
Last Revised: May 7, 2009
Accepted Paper Series
Cultural Challenges to Biotechnology: Native American Genetic Resources and the Concept of Cultural Harm
Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, Vol. 35, p. 396, 2007
Rebecca A. Tsosie
Arizona State University – College of Law
Date Posted: May 7, 2009
Last Revised: May 19, 2009
Accepted Paper Series
Indigenous People and Environmental Justice: The Impact of Climate Change
University of Colorado Law Review, Vol. 78, p. 1625, 2007
Rebecca A. Tsosie
Arizona State University – College of Law
Date Posted: May 7, 2009
Last Revised: May 7, 2009
Accepted Paper Series
Rebecca Tsosie has published “Indigenous People and Environmental Justice: The Impact of Climate Change” with the University of Colorado Law Review. Here is the abstract:
The international dialogue on climate change is currently focused on a strategy of adaptation that includes the projected removal of entire communities, if necessary. Not surprisingly, many of the geographical regions that are most vulnerable to the effects of climate change are also the traditional lands of indigenous communities. This article takes the position that the adaptation strategy will prove genocidal for many groups of indigenous people, and instead argues for recognition of an indigenous right to environmental self-determination, which would allow indigenous peoples to maintain their cultural and political status upon their traditional lands. In the context of climate change policy, such a right would impose affirmative requirements on nation-states to engage in a mitigation strategy in order to avoid catastrophic harm to indigenous peoples. This article argues for a new conception of rights to address the unique harms of climate change. An indigenous right to environmental self-determination would be based on human rights norms in recognition that ‘sovereignty claims‘ by indigenous groups are not a sufficient basis to protect traditional ways of life and the rich and unique cultural norms of such groups. Similarly, tort-based theories of compensation for the harms of climate change have only limited capacity to address the concerns of indigenous peoples.
Rebecca Tsosie (Arizona State) has published “Cultural Challenges to Biotechnology: Native American Genetic Resources and the Concept of Cultural Harm” in the Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics (2007).
You can download the article here: Tsosie Article