Readership: Scholars, students and practitioners of international law; anthropologists, social scientists, indigenous peoples' organisations, human rights advocacy groups and other NGOs interested in indigenous peoples' rights.
Luis Rodríguez-Piñero, Senior Research Fellow, Indigenous Law and Policy Program, The University of Arizona
Introduction I Historical Origins 1: The Colonial Code: The ILO and 'Native Labour' (1919 - 56) 2: The Internationalisation of Indigenism: The ILO and the 'Indian Problem' (1936 - 49) 3: I.L.O. and Applied Anthropology: The Indigenous Labour Programme (1949 - 55) II The Language of Integration 4: From Policy to Law: The Making of the ILO Instruments on Indigenous, Tribal. and Semi-Tribal Populations (1949 - 57) 5: Constructing 'Indigenous Populations': Convention No 107 and the Modern Concept of Indigenousness 6: The Language of Integration: ILO Convention No 107 III The Fall of Integration 7: Integration in Practice: the Implementation of Convention No 107 (1959 - 89) 8: The Fall of Integration: the Revision of Convention No 107 (1975 - 88) 9: The Language of Rights: Convention No 169 (1989) Conclusions