Includes bibliographical references (pages 299-356) and index.
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: 5. Bibliography. 1. The Original Nation Scholarship -- 2. Outline of Chapters -- 3. Conclusion -- Bibliography -- 2. The Nation and the State -- 1. The Nation -- 1.1. Taxonomy of the Nation -- 1.2. Original Nation Libertarianism (ONL) in Europe -- 2. The State -- 2.1. Taxonomy of the State -- 2.2. The State and Post-Colonial Narratives of the Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) -- 3. The "Fourth World" International Analytic Discourse -- 4. The Primacy of the Original Nation in Geopolitical Analyzes -- 5. Conclusions -- Bibliography -- 3. The Conflict Between the Nation and the State -- 1. The Philippines and Moro People -- 2. Myanmar and Rohingya -- 3. Indonesia and West Papua -- 4. India and Kashmir -- 5. Iraq and the Kurdish Homeland -- 6. Japan and Okinawa -- 7. Other Conflicts and Struggles in Other Regions of Asia -- 8. Conclusions -- Bibliography -- 4. Original Nation Approaches to Inter-National Law (ONAIL) -- 1. Critiques of "State-Building" and "Nation-Destroying" Projects -- 2. The State as an Intermediary Agency of International Law -- 3. Inter-National Alliance Building Against the State and Predatory International Organizations -- 4. Investor State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) and the Privatization of Nature as "Property" for Corporate Profit -- 4.1. Bio-Piracy and Bio-Colonialism -- 4.2. Investor State Dispute Settlement (ISDS), Pipeline Projects, and the Original Nation in North America -- 5. The Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), Visiting Forces Agreement (VPA), and the Original Nation -- 5.1. The Immunity of Military Personnel in the Original Nation -- 5.2. Prosecution of U.S. Military Personnel: Prosecution Review Commissions in Okinawa -- 6. The "State-Building" Project, the Military-Sexual Complex, and Counter insurgency Intelligence Operations -- 6.1. The Military-Sexual Complex and the Counterinsurgency Against the Original Nation -- 7. Conclusions -- Bibliography -- 5. The Lakota Nation's Search for Independence: The Nation of Lakota Versus the State of "the United States of America" and the Constitutional Amendments for National Liberation -- 1. The Nation of Lakota Versus the State of "the United States of America" -- 1.1. The Nation of Lakota -- 1.2. The State of "the United States of America" -- 2. The History of the 1936 Lakota Constitution and Its Amendment in 2008 -- 3. Legal Foundations for National Independence: The Case of the Republic of Lakotah -- 3.1. The 1803 Louisiana Purchase Treaty -- 3.2. The 1969 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (VCLT) -- 3.3. The 1960 U.N. Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples -- 3.4. The 2007 U.N. Declaration of the Rights of the Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) -- 3.5. Constitutions, the Declaration of Independence, and U.S. Supreme Court Rulings -- 3.6. Lakota's Impacts on Other Nationalist Movements in North America -- 4. The Constitution of the State Versus the Constitution of the Nation -- 5. Conclusions -- Bibliography -- 6. Earth Jurisprudence, the Rights of Nature, and International Rights of Nature Tribunals -- 1. Earth Jurisprudence: The Rights of Nature -- 2. Legal "Personhood" and Nature's "Personality" -- 3. Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund (CELDF) -- 4. Limitations of the Rights of Nature Juridical Movement -- 5. The Nation's International Rights of Nature Tribunals to Address State and Corporate Crimes -- 6. Conclusions -- Bibliography -- 7. The Original Nation's Path to Recognition Under International Law: The Sovereignty-Making of Zapatista, Cheran, and Neuquen -- 1. The Zapatista Uprising in Chiapas, Mexico -- 2. The Municipio of Cheran in Michoacan, Mexico -- 2.1. P'urhepecha Women and Their Revolutionary Role -- 3. The Modern-Day "Jury de Medietate Linguae": "El Jurado Indigena" (The Indigenous Jury) -- 3.1. El Jurado Indigena (an Indigenous Jury) in Argentina -- 4. Conclusions -- Bibliography -- 8. Conclusion: The Future of the Original Nation and the Global Nation in the Age of Anthropocene -- 1. ONAIL and "Bottom-Up" Perspectives -- 1.1. The Original Nation in the Age of Anthropocene -- 1.2. Asia as the Epicenter of the Anthropogenic Disaster: The Original Nations at Risk -- 2. Zoonotic Virus Pandemics and Global Solidarity -- 3. The Cognitive De construction of the State and Corporation -- 4. The "Inter-National" Grand Jury (IGJ) and International Rights of Nature Tribunal (IRNT) -- 5. Conclusions -- Bibliography.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.