E/CN.4/2005/88
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88.
Indigenous education, adapted to indigenous peoples’ cultures and values, is the best
way of ensuring the right to education; it does not mean shutting out the outside world or
ignoring the challenges posed by national societies or the global economy, but is in fact
viewed by indigenous communities themselves as a necessary tool for the full personal,
social and cultural development of aboriginal peoples.
III. RECOMMENDATIONS
89.
The Special Rapporteur recommends to Governments that they attach high priority
to the objectives and principles of indigenous education and provide public and private
agencies and institutions involved in promoting indigenous education with sufficient
material, institutional and intellectual resources.
90.
The Special Rapporteur invites Governments to prepare, in close collaboration with
indigenous communities, programmes for the training of an adequate number of bilingual
and intercultural education teachers during the Second International Decade of the
World’s Indigenous People. This will entail promoting the recruitment of indigenous
candidates and providing them with the necessary services, incentive programmes and
fellowships, and increasing the number of necessary educational and research facilities.
The Special Rapporteur invites UNESCO and international cooperation partners to join in
this effort.
91.
The Special Rapporteur recommends to universities and research centres that they
increase their involvement in the preparation of special multidisciplinary curricula for
indigenous education. He further recommends that indigenous universities be expanded
and strengthened.
92.
The Special Rapporteur recommends that courses on indigenous peoples (including
their history, philosophy, culture, art and lifestyles) be broadened at all levels of national
education, with an anti-racist, multicultural focus that reflects respect for cultural and
ethnic diversity and, in particular, gender equality. He further recommends that special
attention be paid to the relationship between indigenous peoples and the environment and
that participatory scientific research be promoted in this area (with special attention paid
to vulnerable environments such as the Arctic, the forests of the far North, tropical forests
and high mountain areas).
93.
The Special Rapporteur also recommends that the mass media regularly include
content related to indigenous peoples and cultures in their programming, in a context of
respect for the principles of tolerance, fairness and non-discrimination established in
international human rights instruments, and that indigenous peoples and communities be
given the right to have access to the mass media, including radio, television and the
Internet for their own use.
94.
The Special Rapporteur recommends that, as part of the effort to consolidate the
various kinds of indigenous education, emphasis be placed on strengthening physical
education, special training in the criminal justice system for indigenous people, education
in all areas for indigenous girls and women, distance learning, adult education and
continuing education.
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