扭转历史吗?:使用“MABO 2号”作为解决非洲土著土地要求的化身所面临的挑战

Ernest Duga Titanji
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引用次数: 1

摘要

非洲土著人和他们居住的土地之间的联系是不可否认的。这种关系非常重要,土地是非洲土著和非洲土著文化生存的必要条件。然而,尽管存在这种无可争议的联系,非洲土著人民以及其他殖民地人民主要由于被征服的不利影响而失去了对其土地的所有权。这种情况的直接后果是,即使前殖民统治者及其继承国对土著居民表示同情,并决定退让他们的一些土地,他们也经常遇到法律和现代历史上难以避免的障碍。在一些土著人民把土地让给殖民者的国家也是如此,殖民者接管了他们的指挥权并决定了他们的命运,例如澳大利亚的土著人民。为了解决这一问题,澳大利亚高等法院在《MABO第2号经典案例》中试图界定在何种情况下土地可以作为一项人权事项归还给土著居民。这篇文章探讨了一些明显慷慨的MABO 2号决定可能呈现的“钩子”,其中有一种试图将其作为解决非洲土著土地权利问题的化身进行必要的修改。本文试图回答这样一个问题,即澳大利亚高等法院在MABO第2号案中的决定在多大程度上可以用来解决非洲土著的土地要求。通过分析方法,本文调查了由于澳大利亚和非洲情况之间的背景,历史和进化差异,试图将该决定用作南南相互启发的固有挑战。本文发现,MABO第2号判决本身就带有其在非洲背景下不适用的根源,并就如何在当今非洲土著土地法分配的背景下解读MABO判决提出了建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reversing History?: The Challenges of Using “MABO No. 2” as an Avatar for Resolving Indigenous Land Claims in Africa
The nexus between the indigenous African and the land on which they live cannot be gainsaid. So important is this relationship that land is a sine qua non for the survival of the indigenous African and indigenous African cultures. However, despite this undisputed link, the indigenous African as well as other colonized peoples, lost ownership of their lands due mainly to the adverse effects of subjugation. The direct upshot of this is that even where the former colonial masters and their successor states have become sympathetic to the indigenous populations and decide to retrocede some of their land, they often encounter obstacles both in law and in modern history that are not easy to avoid. This was also the case in some countries where indigenous peoples lost their lands to settlers who took over command and decided on their destiny, such as the indigenous peoples in Australia. It was in an attempt to put this issue to rest that the High Court of Australia in the locus classicus MABO No. 2 attempted to define the circumstances under which land can revert to the indigenous populations as a matter of human rights. This article examines some of the “hooks” that the apparently generous MABO No. 2 decision may present, where there is an attempt to transpose it mutatis mutandis as an avatar to resolve the problem of indigenous land rights in Africa. The paper attempts to answer the question as to what extent the decision of the High Court of Australia in MABO No. 2 can be used to resolve indigenous land claims in Africa. Through an analytical approach, the paper investigates the challenges inherent in attempting to use the decision as a South-South mutual inspiration due to the contextual, historical and evolutionary differences between the Australian and African situations. The paper finds out that the decision in MABO No. 2 carries in it the very germ of its inapplicability in the African context and makes suggestions on how to read the MABO decision in the context of the present-day dispensation of indigenous African land law.
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