What About The Fourth World "Self"?

Natália Medina Araújo, Tatiana Cardoso Squeff, Bianca Guimarães Silva
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Abstract

This paper aims at engaging with Baxi’s article “The Dust of Empire: the Dialectic of Self-Determination and Re-colonization in the First Phase of the Cold War” by arguing that self-determination, as defined during the Cold War, does not include indigenous peoples Cosmovision. Considering that Amerindians were not part of the economic pattern imposed to the Third World during that period, the “self” in the eurocentric lens of self-determination excludes indigenous peoples’ selves and condemns them to being silenced, excluded, or extinct, that is, permanent victims of epistemicide. This paper uses a deductive method based on a bibliographic analysis to discuss the topic through perspectivism, as well as the Fourth-World Approaches to International Law (FWAIL). On the one hand, perspectivism emphasizes the spiritual relationship between indigenous people and nature, which is part of the amerindian cosmovision. FWAIL scholars, on the other hand, argue that international law fails to recognize indigenous peoples’ true collective selves, perpetuating the denial of their rights through the appropriation of their resources, territory and bodies. In this sense, through a critical analysis, it is advanced that such universal view put forward by global north during the Cold War is not only incapable of dealing with the cultural differences that self-determination, seen through the Amerindian cosmovision, implies, but also the reason why they are recurring victims of violations of rights. ILO convention no. 107, the Brazilian legal framework and the country’s recurring excluding actions are examples of it. At the end, it is suggested that proper attention given to the indigenous “self” seems to be a better way to contribute thoroughly to a true collective self-determination debate. KEYWORDS: Self-determination; Cosmovision; Amerindian; Fourth World Approaches to International Law (FWAIL).
第四世界的“自我”呢?
本文旨在与八喜的文章《帝国的尘埃:冷战第一阶段自决与再殖民的辩证法》相结合,认为冷战时期定义的自决并不包括土著民族的宇宙观。考虑到美洲印第安人不是那个时期强加给第三世界的经济模式的一部分,以欧洲为中心的自决镜头中的“自我”排除了土著人民的自我,并谴责他们被沉默、被排斥或灭绝,即永远成为知识灭绝的受害者。本文采用基于文献分析的演绎法,通过透视主义以及第四世界的国际法方法(FWAIL)来讨论这一主题。一方面,透视主义强调土著人与自然的精神关系,这是美洲印第安人宇宙观的一部分。另一方面,FWAIL学者认为,国际法没有承认土著人民真正的集体自我,通过侵占他们的资源、领土和身体,使剥夺他们权利的行为永久化。在这个意义上,通过批判性的分析,提出了全球北方在冷战期间提出的这种普遍观点,不仅无法处理通过美洲印第安人的宇宙观所看到的自决所隐含的文化差异,而且也无法解决他们反复成为侵犯权利受害者的原因。劳工组织第1号公约107、巴西的法律框架和该国反复出现的排斥行动就是例子。最后,有人建议,适当注意土著“自我”似乎是为真正的集体自决辩论作出彻底贡献的更好方式。关键词:民族自决;Cosmovision;美洲印第安人;第四世界的国际法方法(FWAIL)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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