A/HRC/EMRIP/2019/2
I. Introduction
1.
In accordance with its mandate under Human Rights Council resolution 33/25, at its
eleventh session, held in July 2018, the Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples decided to carry out the present study on indigenous peoples’ rights in the context
of borders, migration and displacement, as reflected in the United Nations Declaration on
the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
2.
For that purpose, the Expert Mechanism held a seminar in Chiang Mai, Thailand, on
5 and 6 November 2018. The present study was informed by presentations shared at the
seminar and submissions by Member States, indigenous peoples, national human rights
institutions, academics and others.1
3.
The Expert Mechanism recognizes the need to examine the issues concerning the
nexus between migration and indigenous peoples. The limited work done to date on this
topic, including the lack of disaggregated data on indigenous migration, limits and at the
same time motivates the present study. The study is intended to constitute a step forward in
the understanding of the issues and needs of indigenous peoples, as they relate to the rights
in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. It will explore the
causes, consequences and experiences of indigenous peoples on the move, from an
indigenous perspective, and will provide advice to States on how to ensure the protection of
their rights of in that context.
4.
Migration can mean different things for a range of indigenous peoples, 2 including a
form of indigenous culture itself, such as that of the Sami reindeer herders. In addition to
individual rights and interests, indigenous migration affects the collective rights of
indigenous communities and has consequences for entire communities, for those who leave
and those left behind (see E/2006/43-E/C.19/2006/11). While the Global Compact for Safe,
Orderly and Regular Migration attempts to address the issue of international migration, it
merely includes indigenous peoples as a vulnerable group without recognizing the
specificities and consequences of their migration experience. The global compact on
refugees makes no reference to indigenous refugees. The Expert Mechanism hopes that the
present study will be used to take account of the needs of indigenous peoples in the context
of the implementation of those compacts, and in compliance with the Declaration.
5.
Colonization, both historical and ongoing, is often the backdrop to migration. In the
indigenous context, colonization refers to the processes by which indigenous peoples have
been and continue to be dispossessed of their lands, resources, governments and cultures.
For example, since the colonization of the fifteenth century, the traditional territory of the
Haudenosaunee Confederacy of North America, known to them as “Turtle Island”, has
been split between two States, the Canada and the United States of America, each exerting
significant power over them. 3 Indigenous peoples often orient themselves around features
of the natural landscape, whether river, forest, mesa or tundra, that transcend the
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2
3
2
All the submissions will be available after the July session of the Expert Mechanism at
www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/IPeoples/EMRIP/Pages/BordersMigrationDisplacement.aspx.
In the context of the present study: the term “migration” refers to all movement of indigenous
peoples, internal and across international borders; “migrant” refers to “any person who is outside a
State of which they are a citizen or national, or, in the case of a stateless person, their State of birth or
habitual residence” (see “Principles and Guidelines, supported by practical guidance, on the human
rights protection of migrants in vulnerable situations”, available at
www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/Migration/PrinciplesAndGuidelines.pdf); “displacement” is used
in the context of the Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement where displacement is internal and
forced (E/CN.4/1998/53/Add.2, annex) “refugee” is as defined in article 1 (A) (2) of the Convention
relating to the Status of Refugees, as amended in the Protocol thereto; “borders” in the context of the
present study may be either internal or international (i.e., between sovereign States). See Office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), Recommended Principles and
Guidelines on Human Rights at International Borders, available at
www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/Migration/OHCHR_Recommended_Principles_Guidelines.pdf.
www.oneidaindiannation.com/the-haudenosaunee-creation-story/.