The World Heritage Convention, human rights and Indigenous Peoples

Author:

Fogarty Irene1

Affiliation:

1. University College Dublin, School of Archaeology, Belfield, D04 V1W8, Ireland

Abstract

This article discusses how the World Heritage Convention contradicts and coalesces with rights to culture and rights of Indigenous Peoples as asserted in international law. It describes the origin and universalistic aims of the Convention, and how the Convention’s state-centrism and Eurocentric heritage discourses have stymied the equitable participation of Indigenous Peoples in World Heritage conservation. However it also asserts that a broadening conceptualisation of World Heritage value alongside an increasing focus on synchronicity with human rights can enable recognition and protection of Indigenous Peoples’ worldviews, rights and cultural continuity under an international legal framework. Finally, the article examines the variance among states parties and the World Heritage Committee in upholding human rights standards, using case studies of five World Heritage sites: Budj Bim Cultural Landscape, Australia; Pimachiowin Aki and Wood Buffalo National Park, Canada; the Kenya Lake System in the Great Rift Valley, Kenya; and Kaeng Krachan Forest Complex in Thailand. The article concludes that despite the rights-based turn of recent years, the World Heritage system remains inconsistent in its adherence to international human rights standards.

Publisher

Liverpool University Press

Reference62 articles.

1. Alberta Wilderness Association 2023. Letter. Re: IUCN reactive monitoring mission report on Wood Buffalo National Park From Alberta Wilderness Association to World Heritage Centre 10 July. https://albertawilderness.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/20230710_soc_awa_wbnp_iucn_listing_mcc_fhosp_implications.pdf.

2. Indigenous Peoples’ participation in decision-making in the context of World Heritage sites: how international human rights law can help?;Barreiro Carril B;The Historic Environment: Policy & Practice,2016

3. The lightness of human rights in World Heritage: a critical view of rights-based approaches, vernaculars, and action opportunities;Bille Larsen P;Nordic Journal of Human Rights, Online early,2022

4. Bureau of the World Heritage Committee 2001. Report on the proposed World Heritage Indigenous Peoples’ council of experts (WHC-2001/CONF.205/WEB.3). Paris: UNESCO.

5. Cabrera Ormaza, MV 2014. From protection to participation? Shifting perceptions towards Indigenous Peoples under international law. In Hauser-Schäublin, B (ed) Adat and indigeneity in Indonesia: culture and entitlements between heteronomy and self-ascription. Göttingen: Universitätsverlag Göttingen:31–42.

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