Indigenous Peoples and Justiciability: indigenous advocacy as a strategy to village the rights
Indigenous Peoples – Justiciability – Indigenous Advocacy – To village – Rights – Judiciary
The thesis focuses on the discussion of the leading role of indigenous peoples and their various ways of fighting for their rights, especially in the context after 1988, in which, although they have achieved very important legislative achievements, the search for the realization and maintenance of these rights is what guided the adoption of articulated and collective strategies by indigenous peoples, their communities and organizations. It is in this scenario that the thesis seeks to demonstrate the paths that led indigenous peoples to improve their forms of struggle and mobilization, whether through the strengthening of their organizations (indigenous movement), as well as through the occupation, presence and demands in spaces until then little entered and/or inaccessible by this segment, such as the Judiciary. And it is here that what is being constructed and called “indigenous advocacy” has found a place, which, linked to the collective agendas of the indigenous movement, has been an important struggle strategy of a dynamic, transversal, transitory and transformative nature, not only of the reality of indigenous peoples, but also of the institutions themselves, which will make it possible to contemplate new ways of conceiving justice, fighting, thinking and occupying (to village) Rights.