Indigenous advocacy and the compliance mechanisms of the world heritage convention: a twail reading

HIGHLIGHTS

  • What: TWAIL encompasses the work undertaken by scholars whose research highlights how international law is, mostly, not on the side of Indigenous Peoples and their perception of nature and culture. Even more so, the study shows that management system plans for heritage sites fail because powerful industries wield more influence in blocking environmental governance.
  • Who: World Heritage Convention and collaborators from the Faculty of Law, The University of Hong Kong and Harvard University have published the article: Indigenous Advocacy and the Compliance Mechanisms of the World Heritage Convention: a TWAIL Reading, in the Journal: (JOURNAL . . .

     

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