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societies within which indigenous peoples live come to share in awareness and
conviction about those goals.
IV. Conclusions and recommendations
A.
Activities pursuant to the mandate
81. The Special Rapporteur is grateful for the opportunity to report to the
General Assembly on his activities since the beginning of his mandate in 2008.
These activities fall within four interrelated areas: promoting good practices;
country reports; cases of alleged human rights violations and thematic studies.
82. Within each of the work areas, the Special Rapporteur has built upon
established work methods generally employed by Human Rights Council
special procedure mandate holders, while also developing new ones, especially
in relation to the promotion of good practices and addressing cases of alleged
human rights violations through the communications procedure. The Special
Rapporteur considers that the innovation in work methods has contributed to
greater responsiveness to the human rights concerns of indigenous peoples and
to assisting States and other actors to address those concerns, in furtherance of
his mandate by the Human Rights Council.
83. The Secretariat, States and other relevant actors should encourage and
support innovation and flexibility in the work methods employed by the Special
Rapporteur and his successor mandate holders, when those work methods and
their objectives are clearly within the terms his mandate by the Human Rights
Council and consistent with the Council’s Code of Conduct for special
procedures mandate holders.
84. The Special Rapporteur is grateful to those States that have cooperated
with his mandate, but notes that several States have declined to give their
consent to country visits or to respond to his communications regarding alleged
human rights violations. The Special Rapporteur urges that the lack of
cooperation by some States with the Special Rapporteur and other special
procedures mandate holders be given greater and more systematic attention
within various human review processes within the United Nations system,
including the Human Rights Council’s universal periodic review, and that
specific methods be developed to encourage cooperation, including for country
visits.
85. Efforts should be made to more broadly and effectively disseminate the
reports of the Special Rapporteur, especially country reports and reports on
cases of alleged human rights violations, and to develop strategies and methods
to use the recommendations of the Special Rapporteur to effect positive change.
States should, as a matter of course, disseminate to all relevant officials,
interested parties and the public, those reports that concern them.
86. The Special Rapporteur has promoted and enjoyed a notable level of
cooperation with the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, the Expert
Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, other United Nations
institutions, and regional human rights mechanisms. Greater efforts should be
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