倾听她们的声音:澳大利亚原住民妇女及其水权的法律承认

Katie O’Bryan, kate harriden
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引用次数: 1

摘要

这篇文章旨在强调原住民女性在水资源管理和使用方面的专业知识,以及让她们的声音在这个领域被听到的必要性,因为她们的声音在澳大利亚的水资源法律和政策中没有得到应有的关注和尊重,yindyamarra。在严格审查国际人权框架中对第一民族妇女的水权的表述之前,本文首先介绍了第一民族妇女水权的性质和重要性。文章随后转向澳大利亚,概述了第一民族权利的出现,然后将注意力转向水权。在这方面,鉴于英联邦是国际法上具有法律人格的民族国家,因此对其法律和政策进行了分析。接下来是两个对比鲜明的案例研究,说明了第一民族妇女水权的重要性和脆弱性。这篇文章的结论是,国际法证明了一种缺失的论述,为民族国家承认第一民族妇女水权的整体性质提供了很少的基础,而英联邦的法律和政策尽管显示出有希望的迹象,但尚未为第一民族妇女根据第一民族法律使用和管理水提供任何有意义的范围。
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Hear Their Voices: Australia’s First Nations Women and the Legal Recognition of Their Rights to Water
This article aims to highlight the expertise of First Nations women in water management and use, and the necessity of having their voices heard in this space, as their voices have not received the attention or respect, yindyamarra, they deserve in Australian water law and policy. Before critically examining the articulation of a right to water in the international human rights framework as it applies to First Nations women, this article opens by introducing the nature and importance of First Nations women’s water rights. The article then turns to Australia, outlining the emergence of First Nations rights generally, before turning its attention to water rights. In that respect, Commonwealth law and policy is analysed, given that it is the nation-state with legal personality in international law. Two contrasting case studies follow, illustrating the importance and fragility of First Nations women’s water rights. The article concludes that international law evidences a deficit discourse, providing little basis for nation-states to recognise the holistic nature of water rights of First Nations women, and that Commonwealth law and policy, although showing promising signs, has yet to provide any meaningful scope for First Nations women to use and manage water according to First Nations law.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
40.00%
发文量
1
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