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Vår 2025
JUR-3624 The rights of indigenous peoples - 5 stp
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Type of course
The rights of indigenous peoples is a course offered at master degree level and is offered in the spring semester. The course is mandatory for students on the Masters Programme in Indigenous Studies.
This course specification should be seen together with the study plan for the Master of Philosophy in Indigenous Studies.
The student must be enrolled in the Master programme in Indigenous Studies at UiT-The Arctic University of Norway
Course contents
The course provides a general overview over the rights indigenous peoples, communities and individuals are beneficiaries of under the international legal system, with a particular focus on the right to self-determination and land and resource rights.
The course includes elements of history of international law and political philosophy, as a background to properly understanding the international indigenous rights regime.
Objective of the course
Knowledge
Having passed the exam, the student shall have acquired advanced knowledge of indigenous rights under international law on:
- contemporary international law’s understanding of indigenous peoples
- contemporary international law’s understanding of peoples and minorities
- the basic structure of the international indigenous rights regime
- indigenous peoples’ right to self-determination (and autonomy and self-governance)
- indigenous rights to lands, waters and natural resources
- indigenous rights to traditional knowledge and traditional cultural expressions
Having passed the exam, the student shall have acquired basic knowledge of indigenous rights under international law on:
- international law’s historic position towards indigenous peoples’ rights
- the justification (or lack thereof) for indigenous peoples’ rights in political philosophy
- indigenous language rights
Skills
Having passed the exam, the students will:
- have the capacity to identify what are relevant international legal sources with regard to indigenous rights, and to assess the relative weight these carry
- have the capacity to apply a relevant legal method to analyse and argue cases pertaining to indigenous rights
- be able to discuss what is the legal relation between indigenous peoples and states
- be able to discuss what is the legal relation between indigenous communities and resource extractors seeking access to the communities´ lands
General competence
Having passed the exam, the students will:
- have the capacity to properly analyse indigenous rights in accordance with relevant legal method and to communicate the outcome of such analyses in a professional manner.
- have the capacity to work professionally with indigenous law in public and private positions.
The qualifications will be part of the required knowledge, skills and competences provided by the MIS program.