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consultations or consent will often serve to breed distrust on the part of indigenous peoples,
making any eventual agreement difficult to achieve.
69.
Also in terms of time, consultations should not be bound to temporal constraints
imposed by the State, as is done under some regulatory regimes. In order for indigenous
peoples to be able to freely enter into agreements, on an informed basis, about activities that
could have profound effects on their lives, they should not feel pressured by time demands
of others, and their own temporal rhythms should be respected.
5.
Indigenous participation through representative institutions
70.
A defining characteristic of indigenous peoples is the existence of their own
institutions of representation and decision-making, and it must be understood that this
feature makes consultations with indigenous peoples very different from consultations with
the general public or from ordinary processes of State or corporate community engagement.
The Special Rapporteur notes cases in which companies and States have bypassed
indigenous peoples’ own leadership and decision-making structures out of misguided
attempts to ensure broad community support. Where indigenous peoples are concerned,
however, international standards require engagement with them through the representatives
determined by them and with due regard for their own decision-making processes. Doing so
is the best way of ensuring broad community support. Indigenous peoples should be
encouraged to include appropriate gender balance within their representative and decisionmaking institutions. However, such gender balance should not be dictated or imposed upon
indigenous peoples by States or companies, anymore than indigenous peoples should
impose gender balance on them.
71.
It may be that in some circumstances ambiguity exists about which indigenous
representatives are to be engaged, in the light of the multiple spheres of indigenous
community and organization that may be affected by particular extractive projects, and also
that in some instances indigenous representative institutions may be weakened by historical
factors. In such cases indigenous peoples should be given the opportunity and time, with
appropriate support from the State if they so desire it, to organize themselves to define the
representative institutions by which they will engage in consultations over extractive projects.
F.
Rights-centered, equitable agreements and partnership
72.
As stated above (para. 30), the principle of free, prior and informed consent does not
fulfil its role as protective of and instrumental to indigenous peoples’ rights unless consent,
when it is given, is given on just and equitable terms. Accordingly, there is growing
awareness that agreements with indigenous peoples allowing for extractive projects within
their territories must be crafted on the basis of full respect for their rights in relation to the
affected lands and resources, and provide for equitable distribution of the benefits of the
projects within a framework of genuine partnership.
1.
Impact mitigation
73.
Measures to safeguard against or to mitigate environmental and other impacts that
could adversely affect the rights of indigenous peoples in relation to their territories are an
essential component of any agreement for extractive activities within the territories of
indigenous peoples. Experience shows that special attention is required for potential
impacts on health conditions, subsistence activities and places of cultural or religious
significance. Provisions for impact prevention and mitigation should be based on rigorous
impact studies developed with the participation of the indigenous peoples concerned (see
para. 65 above) and should be specific to the impacts identified with regard to particular
rights that are recognized under domestic or international law. Additionally, they should
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