The principles of sovereignty, equality, and self-determination - which have long been the basis for nonintervention in the affairs of sovereign states - have more recently been widened to condemn outside interference by national governments in the affairs of indigenous communities within their territories. These same principles, however, may equally be employed as arguments by sovereign states to justify their engagement in the affairs of indigenous communities residing within their borders, thereby creating the potential for considerable legal, ethical, and political tension. States are urged to respect the autonomy of indigenous people as well as their right to develop, preserve and transmit their history, traditions, and values to future generations; yet states also owe obligations towards indigenous people to facilitate their enjoyment of certain established rights, even as the provision of these obligations may be incompatible with indigenous peoples' established practices, values, interests, priorities, and beliefs. Multilateral agencies face a similar dilemma in their engagements with national governments: when to respect the sovereignty of national governments and when to champion international law and covenants (e.g., regarding the rights of women and sexual minorities)? Drawing on cases from education, health care, and environment protection, this paper proposes an analytical framework for articulating and reconciling competing rights-based development commitments in low-income countries, where the presence of multilateral agencies and intensifying imperatives to attain global development goals generates forces exacerbating (potentially) competing national and sub-national commitments.
Authors
- DOI
- https://dx.doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-10979
- Date published
- 19-11-2024
- Disclosure Date
- 2024/11/19
- Disclosure Status
- Disclosed
- Doc Name
- Reconciling Multi-Level Rights-Based Commitments in Development : Assessing the Legal and Administrative Imperatives of Responding to Education, Health Care, and Environment Protection Challenges
- Originating Unit
- Off of Sr VP Dev Econ/Chief Econ (DECVP)
- Pages
- 24
- Product Line
- Research Activity
- Published in
- United States of America
- Rel Proj ID
- 1W-Social Institutions And Policy Implementation -- P168541
- Series Name
- Policy Research working paper; PEOPLE;
- Unit Owning
- DECPH:Poverty, Ineq. & Human Dev (DECPH)
- Version Type
- Final
- Volume No
- 1
Table of Contents
- Policy Research Working Paper 10979 1
- Assessing the Legal and Administrative Imperatives 1
- Reconciling Multi-Level Rights-Based Commitments in Development Assessing the Legal and Administrative Imperatives of Responding to Education Health Care and Environment Protection Challenges 3
- Key words 3
- JEL codes 3
- 1. Introduction 4
- 2. Arguments against interventions by national governments in sovereign Indigenous groups 5
- Indigenous Groups and Legal Protections 7
- Sovereignty Equality and the Right to Self-Determination 9
- Right to Health 10
- 3. Arguments for interventions by national governments in the affairs of indigenous groups 11
- State Sovereignty and Non-Intervention 11
- Preexisting Rights and Corresponding Duties under International Law 14
- Right to Health 15
- Humanitarian Assistance 16
- 4. When and how does international law inform decisions about whether multilateral development agencies should or should not engage with sovereign national states 18
- 5. Reconciling competing claims and imperatives 22
- 6. Conclusion 24