African bcp initiative inception meeting report
- Land
- Kenya
- Mocambique
- Namibia
- South Africa
- Tanzania
- Zambia
- Zimbabwe
Amerindian Peoples Assiciation
- Logo
- Country
- Argentina
- Bolivia
- Brasil
- Chile
- Colombia
- Equador
- French Guyana
- Guyana
- Peru
- Surinam
- Description
The Amerindian Peoples Association (APA) is a non-governmental Indigenous Peoples organization in Guyana.
Membership of the APA is made up of Units throughout the country, currently amounting to close to eighty such units. The Association is led by an Executive Committee comprising the President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer, Assistant Secretary/Treasurer, eleven regional representatives, a women’s representative and a youth representative.
The APA has a central office in Georgetown which is staffed by persons from interior communities who carry out the daily functions of the organization and who provides the link between what is happening in the communities and what is happening at the national and international levels.
Kachi Yupi Protocolo Consulta Previa Comunidades Salinas Grandes y Laguna de Guayatayoc Dic 2015 1
- Land
- Argentina
Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations
- Country
- Canada
- Greenland
- Mexico
- USA
Procedures for Consultations between State Authorities and The Sami Parliament [Norway] regjeringen.no
- Country
- Norway
PROTOCOLO PARA LA CONSULTA Y CONSENTIMIENTO PREVIO SUAREZ BUENOS AIRES CAUCA
- Land
- Colombia
Const Court ruling T 530 16
- Date
- 27. Dez. 2016
- Country
- Colombia
- issued by
- Web location
- http://www.corteconstitucional.gov.co/relatoria/2016/t-530-16.htm
- Document number
- T-530/16
Subanon people
- Country
- Philippines
- Image
- Description
Subanon (also spelled Subanen or Subanun) is a tribe indigenous to the Zamboanga peninsula area, particularly living in the mountainous areas of Zamboanga del Sur and Misamis Occidental, Mindanao Island, Philippines. The Subanon people speak the Subanon language. The name means "a person or people of the river."[1] These people originally lived in the lowlying areas. However, due to disturbances and competitions from other settlers like the Muslims, and migrations of Cebuano speakers to the coastal areas attracted by the inviting Land Tenure Laws, further pushed the Subanen into the interior.[2][3]
Subanons generally refer to themselves as a whole as the gbansa Subanon, meaning “the Subanon nation”. They distinguish themselves from each other by their roots or point of origin. These are based on names of rivers, lakes, mountains, or locations. Wikipedia