'Mapping for Rights': Indigenous Peoples, Litigation and Legal Empowerment

8 Pages Posted: 8 May 2018

Date Written: April 2018

Abstract

In the process of adjudication and litigation, indigenous peoples are usually facing a very complex and demanding process to prove their rights to their lands and ancestral territories. Courts and tribunals usually impose a very complex and onerous burden of proof on the indigenous plaintiffs to prove their rights over their ancestral territories. To prove their rights indigenous peoples often have to develop map of their territories to prove their economic, cultural, and spiritual connections to their territories. This article reflects on the role played by the mapping of indigenous territories in supporting indigenous peoples’ land claims. It analyses the importance of mapping within the process of litigation, but also its the impact beyond the courtroom.

Keywords: litigation, indigenous peoples, legal empowerment, evidence gathering, mapping

Suggested Citation

Gilbert, Jeremie and Clench, Ben, 'Mapping for Rights': Indigenous Peoples, Litigation and Legal Empowerment (April 2018). Erasmus Law Review, Vol. 11, No. 01, 2018, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3174633

Jeremie Gilbert (Contact Author)

University of Roehampton ( email )

Roehampton Lane
London, SW15 5PU
United Kingdom

Ben Clench

Independent ( email )

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