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首页> 外文期刊>Water Alternatives: An Interdisciplinary Journal on Water Politics and Development >Viewpoint - From dams to development justice: Progress with 'free, prior and informed consent' Since the World Commission on Dams
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Viewpoint - From dams to development justice: Progress with 'free, prior and informed consent' Since the World Commission on Dams

机译:观点-从水坝到发展正义:自世界水坝委员会以来取得“自由,事先和知情同意”的进展

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The World Commission on Dams (WCD) helped establish as development best practice the requirement to respect the right of indigenous peoples to give or withhold their 'free, prior and informed consent' (FPIC) to development projects that will affect them. Recognition of this right helps redress the unequal power relations between indigenous peoples and others seeking access to their lands and resources. In this Viewpoint, we examine the evolution of policy in the ten years since the publication of the WCD Report, and how FPIC has been affirmed as a right of indigenous peoples under international human rights law and as industry best practice for extractive industries, logging, forestry plantations, palm oil, protected areas and, most recently, for projects to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from deforestation and forest degradation. To date, relatively few national legal frameworks explicitly require respect for this right and World Bank standards have yet to be revised in line with these advances in international law. We analyse how international law also needs to clarify how the right to FPIC relates to the State'?s power to impose resource exploitation in the 'national interest' and whether 'local communities' more broadly also enjoy the right to FPIC. In practice, as documented in this Viewpoint and in the cases we review, the right to FPIC is widely abused by corporations and State agencies. A growing tendency to reduce implementation of FPIC to a simplified check list of actions for outsiders to follow, risks again removing control over decisions from indigenous peoples. For FPIC to be effective it must respect indigenous peoples' rights to control their customary lands, represent themselves through their own institutions and make decisions according to procedures and rhythms of their choosing.
机译:世界水坝委员会(WCD)帮助确立了一项最佳发展实践,即尊重土著人民对将影响他们的发展项目给予或保留其“自由,事先和知情同意”(FPIC)的权利的要求。承认这项权利有助于纠正土著人民与寻求获得其土地和资源的其他人之间不平等的权力关系。从这一观点出发,我们研究了自WCD报告发布以来十年来政策的变化,以及如何根据国际人权法将FPIC确认为土著人民的权利以及采掘业,伐木业,采伐业,林业种植园,棕榈油,保护区,以及最近减少森林砍伐和森林退化所致温室气体排放的项目。迄今为止,相对很少的国家法律框架明确要求尊重这一权利,世界银行的标准尚未根据国际法的这些进步进行修订。我们分析国际法还需要如何澄清自由事先知情同意权与国家以“国家利益”施加资源开采权的关系,以及“地方社区”是否更广泛地享有自由知情同意权。在实践中,如本观点所述,在我们审查的案例中,公司和国家机构广泛滥用自由事先知情同意权。将FPIC的实施减少为简化的行动清单以供外部人员遵循的趋势越来越大,这又有可能失去对土著人民决策的控制。为了使自由事先知情同意有效,它必须尊重土著人民控制其习惯土地,通过自己的机构代表自己并根据其选择的程序和节奏做出决定的权利。

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