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At the margins of globalization : indigenous peoples and international economic law / Sergio Puig.
Penn Museum Library K3247 .P85 2021
Available
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Puig, Sergio (Law teacher), author.
- Series:
- Globalization and human rights (Cambridge, England)
- Globalization and human rights
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Indigenous peoples (International law)--Economic aspects.
- Indigenous peoples (International law).
- Law and globalization--Economic aspects.
- Law and globalization.
- Foreign trade regulation.
- Investments, Foreign (International law).
- Globalization--Economic aspects.
- Indigenous peoples--Economic conditions.
- Physical Description:
- xiv, 151 pages ; 24 cm.
- Place of Publication:
- Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY, USA : Cambridge University Press, 2021.
- Contents:
- Machine generated contents note: 1. Globalization and Its Multiple Discontents
- 1.1. Globalization and Absolute Gains
- 1.2. Discontents Based on Relative Gains
- 1.2.1. The Populist Discontent
- 1.2.2. The Coquorate Power Discontent
- 1.2.3. The Protectionist Discontent
- 1.2.4. The Geoeconomic Discontent
- 1.3. Discontents Based on Absolute Losses
- 1.3.1. The Sustainability Perspective
- 1.3.2. TWAIL and Other Perspectives
- 2. The Process of Susceptibility and Exclusion
- 2.1. Illegitimacy
- 2.2. Discrimination
- 2.3. Reregulation
- 2.4. Inequality
- 3. Indigenous Peoples under International Economic Law
- 3.1. General Protections under International Law
- 3.2. Specific Protections in Economic Regimes
- 3.2.1. Intellectual Property
- 3.2.2. Finance
- 3.2.3. Trade
- 3.2.4. Investment
- 4. The Experience of Indigenous Peoples under Economic Regimes
- 4.1. A Methodological Caveat
- 4.2. Intellectual Property
- 4.2.1. The Kuna People
- 4.2.2. The San People
- 4.3. Finance
- 4.3.1. The Huave People
- 4.3.2. The Maasai People
- 4.4. Trade
- 4.4.1. The Inuit People
- 4.4.2. The Guarani-Kaiowa People
- 4.5. Investment
- 4.5.1. Two North American Tribes
- 4.5.2. The Sawhoyamaxa People
- 5. The Recalibration of Indigenous Rights and Economic Law
- 5.1. Normative and Jurisprudential Impacts
- 5.1.1. A Shield for Indigenous Rights
- 5.1.2. A Sword for Indigenous Rights
- 5.2. Transformative Impacts
- 5.2.1. New Standards, Metrics and Tools
- 5.2.2. The Practice of International Economic Lawmaking
- 5.2.3. Social and Development Policy
- 6. Indigenous Interests and the Future of Economic Treaties
- 6.1. The Synthesis of Marginalization
- 6.2. Legitimacy: Toward the Empowerment of the Marginalized
- 6.2.1. The Safeguard Role of Consultations
- 6.2.2. Minimum Procedural Standards to Achieve Protection
- 6.2.3. Self-Determination and Consent
- 6.2.4. Shared Responsibilities
- 6.3. Neutrality: Improving Indigenous-Tailored Design
- 6.31. Tailored Exceptions
- 6.3.2. Locking in Domestic Legal Reform
- 6.4. Democracy: Demo-Regulation for the Rise of Equality
- 6.5. Equality: Shared Benefits and Beyond
- 7. Toward an Indigenous-Based Critique of Globalization
- 7.1. Beyond the Cycle of Susceptibility and Exclusion
- 7.2. Indigenous Peoples as Core Participants of Globalization.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Local Notes:
- Acquired for the Penn Libraries with assistance from the George Clapp Vaillant Book Fund.
- Other Format:
- ebook version :
- ISBN:
- 9781108497640
- 1108497640
- OCLC:
- 1202438036
- Publisher Number:
- 99988614633
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