The incessant demand for more lands and natural resources to feed the neoliberal
economic needs resulted in the development-led forced displacement of many
minority groups from their ancestral lands. Such violent expulsions are a global
phenomenon. Thus, development-induced persecutions of the minority, and the legal
and institutional framework to protect them, cannot be fully addressed in isolation
from the existing hegemonic neoliberal economic structure at the global scale.
The reckless exploitation of natural resources is also disastrous for the climate, as is
now well accepted. Here again, minorities and indigenous peoples are also the
primary victims of the damaging impact of environmental catastrophe.
Minority rights discourse should, therefore, build on the global momentum for
climate justice, and offer a powerful narrative to articulate the point that issues of
climate justice cannot be separated from justice for minorities in both political and
economic domains.
In this regard, it is also essential to problematise and challenge the dominant idea of
‘development’ as the teleological end of human progress, to counterbalance its
tendency to commodify, and to expose its capacity to articulate state power in terms
of economic growth rather than welfare.
(4) Beyond the Vulnerability Framework: The dominant discourse on the future
direction of minority rights in international law largely revolves around the
integration of minorities within the state they live in. At the same time, the
majoritarian suspicion about the minority’s allegiance to the state remains unabated,
as minorities keep challenging the legitimacy of the existing territorial, political, and
economic structures of the state.
Since the birth of modern statehood in Westphalia, whenever states have been reorganised, the minority question re-appeared in relation to the very political
organisation of the state: how to deal with the leftover population (minorities), who
have been denied their own ‘state’?
This underscores the sui generis nature of minorities, compared to other vulnerable
social groups – based on gender, sex, or age – that too routinely face discrimination
but generally do not question the legitimacy of the state itself. Within the traditional
vulnerability framework minorities are generally understood as mere subjects of
oppression; this in turn makes them the individual objects of international human
rights discourse along with other oppressed social group members.
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