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The right of selfdetermination in the UNDRIP with focus on Mexico. Edition No. 1

VDM Publishing House, Aug 2010, Pages: 120


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After over 20 years of discussing and defining, the UN-Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples finally has been approved. According to the evaluation report for the first international decade of indigenous people, ?the presence of the indigenous matter to governments is, to say the least, unequal; their situation is usually alluded to the position of exemplifying certain problem areas, such as poverty, discrimination, inequality, ?invisibility and exclusion, cultural differences, restricted access to basic services, lower life expectancy or high percentage of migration. The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples adopted on 13th of September 2007 represents one of the most important developments in the promotion and protection of the basic rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous peoples. Article 3 of the Declaration speaks of the controversial right of self-determination of indigenous peoples, which seems to me the most interesting issue. I concentrated on this topic investigating more thoroughly the situation concerning self-determination for its special importance to indigenous peoples and so to the Mayan population in Mexico.



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