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At the margins of globalization : indigenous peoples and international economic law / Sergio Puig.

Penn Museum Library K3247 .P85 2021
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Puig, Sergio (Law teacher), author.
Contributor:
George Clapp Vaillant Book Fund.
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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