Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_M - Mexico Indigenous Peoples
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 98    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Mexico Indigenous Peoples:     more books (100)
  1. The Guarijíos of the Sierra Madre: Hidden People of Northwestern Mexico
  2. Rebel address to Congress is step toward addressing indigenous complaints.(Mexico)(Brief Article): An article from: America's Insider
  3. Some Last People: Vanishing Tribes of Bhutan, China, Mexico, Mangolia and Siberia by Pierre Odier, 2004-09-30
  4. INDIAN COMMUNITY OF COLONIAL MEXICO (Latin America Studies) by Simon Miller, 2003-08-20
  5. The Ute Indians of Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico by Virginia McConnell Simmons, 2001-09
  6. Who Defines Indigenous?: Identities, Development, Intellectuals, And the State in Northern Mexico by Carmen Martinez Novo, 2005-12-15
  7. Resistance is Not Futile.(indigenous movements in Mexico, Ecuador)(Brief Article): An article from: Multinational Monitor
  8. The Paradise Garden Murals of Malinalco: Utopia and Empire in Sixteenth-Century Mexico by Jeanette Favrot Peterson, 1993-01
  9. The Hot and the Cold: Ills of Humans and Maize in Native Mexico (Anthropological Horizons) by Jacques M. Chevalier, W. Andr?s Sßnchez Bain, 2003-04-19
  10. Defiance and Deference in Mexico's Colonial North: Indians under Spanish Rule in Nueva Vizcaya by Susan Deeds, 2003-08-01
  11. The Conquest of Michoacan: The Spanish Domination of the Tarascan Kingdom in Western Mexico, 1521-1530 by J. Benedict Warren, 1985-03
  12. Mesoamerican Healers
  13. Mayordomo: Chronicle of an Acequia in Northern New Mexico by Stanley Crawford, 1993-07-01
  14. Codex Bodley: A Painted Chronicle from the Mixtec Highlands, Mexico (Treasures from the Bodleian Library) by Maarten Jansen, Gabina Aurora Perez Jimenez, 2005-12-15

61. H-Net Review: Pete Sigal On Alfredo Lopez Austin And Leonardo Lopez Lujan, Mexic
mexico and to present a series of debates about the important topics relatedto the history, archaeology, and art history of the indigenous peoples.
http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=180501034792091

62. World Bank - Documents & Reports - Mexico - Third Basic Education Development Pr
Home Documents Reports Report Details. mexico Third Basic EducationDevelopment Project indigenous peoples plan, Vol. 1 of 1.
http://www-wds.worldbank.org/servlet/WDS_IBank_Servlet?pcont=details&eid=0000903

63. Indigenous Peoples Sites: Ethnic And Minority Studies: Subject Guides: MIT Libra
indigenous peoples of mexico in Spanish and English, this page is dedicatedto the people that make up the original inhabitants of present-day mexico.
http://libraries.mit.edu/guides/subjects/ethnic/inpesites.html

African/African American Sites

Asian/Asian American Sites

Hispanic/Latino Sites

Indigenous Peoples Sites
Jewish Sites

Miscellaneous Sites

Marlene Manoff
Associate Head
Collection Manager,
Humanities Library mmanoff@MIT.EDU MIT Subject Guides Ethnic and Minority Studies Indigenous Peoples Sites

64. HLP
Development/Humanitarian Law Project has been exceptionally concerned about thewar in Chiapas, mexico a war against the indigenous peoples of the Tojolabal
http://hlp.home.igc.org/docs/55_15.html
UNITED NATIONS
COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS
Fifty-fifth session
Agenda item 15
Rights of Indigenous Peoples: The Situation in Chiapas

Oral Presentation by Randy Vasquez,
Monday, April 19, 1999.
International Educational Development/Humanitarian Law Project has been exceptionally concerned about the war in Chiapas, Mexico - a war against the Indigenous peoples of the Tojolabal, Tzotzil, Tzeltzal, Chole and Zoque communities. Since the end of the main military actions by the Ejercito Zapatista de Liberacion Nacional (the EZLN) and the Mexican Federal Army in 1994, a dirty war has been carried out against these Indigenous peoples.
The EZLN has called for a political solution to the situation, yet the government has stormed the area with tens of thousands of soldiers and has occupied Indigenous schools and villages. Roads and highways are cut off. Many Indigenous peoples accused of being sympathizers of the EZLN are arrested, tortured and even killed. These Indigenous people are in a crisis situation, with harvests destroyed and hunger plaguing them.
There are now 70,000 military forces in Chiapas - almost one third of the Mexican Army. In addition, the State Public Security Forces, the Judicial State and Federal Police and the Migration Police, combined with the military, have a total of more than 239 bases in Chiapas alone. The purpose of this overwhelming presence is to intimidate the Indigenous population in Chiapas, and to disperse them from their traditional areas. The trigger-happy army, and the paramilitary forces that function with the acquiescence of the military forces, have been responsible for some of the worst massacres of Indigenous peoples in this century: Acteal; Chavajebal; Union Progreso; San Juan de la Libertad will ring in our ears far into the next millenium. The more than 20,000 Indigenous peoples forced to leave their traditional homes for camps leave behind them unspeakable humanitarian and human rights law violations.

65. Archpolitics
Food Canadian indigenous peoples anthropological archaeology. Vol andmexico. Westview .. world s indigenous peoples and mexico) and
http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/afburns/Mexico2002/archpol.htm
WEB SITE RESOURCES ON THE RELATIONSHIP OF ARCHAEOLOGY, POLITICS, AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLE Collected and organized by the group “Nohoch Maak” February 4, 2002 Return to Course Syllabus Latin America
present, Latin America has been occupy a central place Mexican indigenouscommunities . In n Mexico he international politics . Writing Archaeology . In
uts.cc.utexas.edu/~tomasek/Resources/Latin%20America.html - 9k - Cached Similar pages Index to Volume 46 - Ethnohistory 46:4
IndigenousCommunities of Native America (Frances in CentralMexico... Giveaways: Indigenous
Testaments Subaltern Politics (Terry West Mexico : Art and Archaeology
muse.jhu.edu/demo/eth/46.4index.html - 29k - Cached Similar pages Places, People, and Cultures
geography, economics, politics and and CentralAmerica Canadian Communities Atlas. ...Mexico
Web other indigenous information anthropology, archaeology , art
teams.lacoe.edu/documentation/places/history/geography/people.html - 28k – Office of Communications
of politics , religion of indigenous civilizations in Mexico CentralAmerica South
America prior INDUSTRIAL ARCHAEOLOGY technology

66. Indigenous Peoples Council On Biocolonialism
the 5th WTO Ministerial Conference in Cancun, mexico from 1014 September 2003 wishto extend our thanks to the indigenous peoples of mexico, particularly the
http://www.ipcb.org/resolutions/htmls/cancun.html
Search IPCB:
Use
for more
specific results
THE INTERNATIONAL CANCUN DECLARATION
OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
5th WTO Ministerial Conference - Cancun, Quintana Roo, Mexico, 12 September 2003
We, the international representatives of Indigenous Peoples gathered here during the 5th WTO Ministerial Conference in Cancun, Mexico from 10-14 September 2003 wish to extend our thanks to the Indigenous Peoples of Mexico, particularly the Mayan Indigenous Peoples of Quintana Roo, for welcoming us. We share the concerns of our Indigenous brothers and sisters, as expressed in the Congreso Nacional Indigena Declaration of Cancun. We join our voices to this CNI Declaration and its conclusions and recommendations. We wish to especially recognize and honor the sacrifice of our Korean brother, Mr. Lee-Kyung-Hae, made here in Cancun. His act of self-immolation was a dignified cultural expression profoundly reflecting the daily reality of the effects of Globalization and liberalized trade on peasants and Indigenous Peoples throughout the world.
We have come to Cancun to address critical issues and negative impacts of the WTO Trade Negotiations on our families, communities and nations.

67. PROTEST IN MEXICO &THE USA OVER TRANSFER OF BISHOP RAUL VERA
and pray for peace and hereby commit ourselves to continuing solidarity with thepoor in mexico, especially with the millions of indigenous peoples in a
http://www.zmag.org/chiapas1/protestvera.htm
The Bishop of Chiapas, Raul Vera, set to replace retiring Bishop Samuel Ruiz, has been transferred by the Vatican. This is an event of some importance because Raul Vera is sympathetic to the indigenous people of Chiapas. The people of the region believe this is a political decision. The notice below is a model, containing specific information and addresses, which you can use to write to the Church authorities to protest this transfer. January 7, 2000 His Excellency The Most Rev. Gabriel Montalvo Apostolic Nuncio to the United States 3339 Massachusetts Ave., NW Washington, DC 20008 Dear Sir: We, the undersigned, are deeply concerned about the Vatican's transfer of Bishop Raul Vera from the diocese of San Cristobal de las Casas Chiapas) to Saltillo, Coahuila. Bishop Vera was slated to replace retiring Bishop Samuel Ruiz, who has defended the rights of the indigenous peoples in Chiapas over the past 40 years. This decision could have profound social and political implications for Chiapas, especially for the indigenous communities, including the possibility of increasing the repression against

68. LearningLanguages.net
lesson plan to teach students about the Spanish conquest of mexico. Searched forClassification equals Culture indigenous peoples , Advanced Search.
http://www.learninglanguages.net/SPT--AdvancedSearch.php?vn=Classification&vv=Cu

69. CIEPAC: Chiapas Al Día, No. 185
Conference in Cancun, mexico, from the 10 th to the 14 th of September, 2003, wantto give our thanks to the indigenous peoples of mexico, in particular the
http://www.ciepac.org/bulletins/ingles/ing389.htm

CIEPAC

January 13, 2004 Declarations of the Indigenous Peoples THE INTERNATIONAL CANCUN DECLARATION OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
th th We, the international representatives of Indigenous Peoples, reunited here during the Fifth Ministerial Conference in Cancun, Mexico, from the 10 th to the 14 th of September, 2003, want to give our thanks to the Indigenous Peoples of Mexico, in particular the Indigenous Mayan People of Quintana Roo, for welcoming us.  We share the concerns of our Mexican indigenous brothers and sisters, as expressed in the Cancun Declaration of the National Indigenous Congress (CNI).  We add our voices to this International Declaration to those of the CNI, and to their conclusions and recommendations. We want to give special recognition and honour to our Korean brother, Mr. Lee-Kyung-Hae for his sacrifice carried out here in Cancun.  His act of self-immolation was an expression of cultural dignity which deeply reflects the daily reality of campesinos, peasants and the Indigenous peoples throughout the world, and the results of globalization and the free market.  We have come to Cancun to direct ourselves to the critical themes and the negative impacts of the WTO on our families, communities and nations. The growing impoverishment of indigenous and tribal coffee producers in the high summits of Guatemala, Mexico, Colombia, Vietnam, etc. due to the fall in the commodity prices for this product.

70. Indigenous Peoples Of Brazil Plan Convergence On Anniversary Celebration
the continued struggles of Native peoples and the running moving fences separatingindigenous reserve lands In mexico, indigenous peasants carried out large
http://www.moles.org/ProjectUnderground/drillbits/5_05/4.html
Volume 5, Number 5, March 31, 2000 project underground home INDIGENOUS PEOPLES OF BRAZIL PLAN CONVERGENCE ON ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
Nearly 2,000 indigenous peoples from all over Brazil are organizing a convergence on Santa Cruz da Cabralia in April 2000 to counter the governmentâs planned celebration of the "discovery" of Brazil. Caravans will leave from each part of the country and head toward Bahia on the east coast of Brazil where in 1549, Portuguese conquistador Pedro Alvar Cabral landed his ship in search of gold, slaves, and Christian converts.
Indigenous March 2000 will culminate in the Conference of Indigenous Peoples and Organizations in Coroa Vermelha, Bahia, where proposals for "another 500 years" will be presented. Organizers say more than 70,000 non-Indian protesters, many from Brazilâs radical landless movement, will join in. The march symbolizes indigenous resistance and the struggle for the rights historically denied to them. Numerous committees have been formed across Brazil under the banner of "Brazil: 500 Years of Indigenous, Black and Popular Resistance," to mobilize the Brazilian public and reflect on the new forms of colonialism fed by the media.
In Brazil alone, the estimated native population was 5,000,000, belonging to 1,000 tribes, before Cabral arrived. By 1560, 11 years after he landed on the shores of Bahia, 40,000 indigenous peoples were enslaved and working on plantations. Today, according to Survival, a UK-based human rights organization, there are only 330,000 native peoples divided into about 210 tribes, largely because of centuries of disease, slavery, violence, starvation and suicide.

71. GTZ - Indigenous Peoples In Latin America & The Caribbean
The majority of Latin America’s indigenous peoples live in Bolivia, Guatemala,Ecuador, mexico and Peru roughly 90% of the total Latin American indigenous
http://www.gtz.de/indigenas/english/
Indigenous Peoples
Home
Home
Introduction

German DC

Other donors

International

Instruments
DC approaches

Service

Glossary
Contact ... GTZ Home
The indigenous peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean are those sectors of the population which are historically related to the pre-colonial peoples of the American continent, that is to say, the "original inhabitants of the sub-continent". The estimates of their percentage of the total population differ greatly. Numbers vary from 12.6% (World Bank) to 7.2% (Instituto Indigenista Interamericano in Mexico). Overview These differences are not only the result of diverse definitions of indigenous peoples but are also due to their self-definition and the different methods of population census. The majority of Latin America’s indigenous peoples live in Bolivia Guatemala Ecuador Mexico and Peru - roughly 90% of the total Latin American indigenous population. Uruguay is the only country in Central and South America today with no indigenous population.

72. Amnesty International - Library - Americas: Indigenous Peoples -- Second-class C
Violations related to cultural identity In a number of countries, including Guatemalaand mexico, nonSpanish speaking indigenous people are often questioned
http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGAMR010062002?open&of=ENG-2AM

73. Internet Communication Network Of Indigenous Peoples From Oaxaca
Internet Communication Network of indigenous peoples from Oaxaca (mexico) (StrengtheningNetworks of Researchers on Information and Communication Technologies
http://web.idrc.ca/en/ev-5748-201-1-DO_TOPIC.html
var static_ko="5748"; var static_section="201"; var static_langue="en"; IDRC.CA Research Activities Information (ICTs) PAN Americas ... Networking Topic Explorer PAN Americas
About us

Partners

Projects
...
Resources

Participate
Editors
Angélica Ospina
Andrea Puppo

ID:
Added: 2002-07-09 13:06 (Ottawa)
Modified: 2002-12-11 7:23 (Ottawa) Internet Communication Network of Indigenous Peoples from Oaxaca (Mexico) (Strengthening Networks of Researchers on Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) in Latin America and the Caribbean) - (04235-6) The proposal of the communication network from the indigenous people of Oaxaca (Mexico) consists in articulating some communication processes that would allow the Agency of indigenous peoples from Oaxaca to strengthen their communal values and lifestyles. These mechanisms will also include some services available to diverse non-governmental social organizations, community, and municipal authorities. Internet will mostly support the work of this Agency. The on-line Agency will offer ample information about indigenous communities and social organization. It will be an open space for information and discussion about diverse topics: culture, community life and development in Oaxaca and other regions of Mexico. A bilingual newspaper ("Bilingulazaa") will be made available for those communities that will not have access to the network. Institution Binigulazaa Asociación Civil - Binigulazaa@ Oaxaca (Mexico) Binigulazaa Document(s) Evaluación del Proyecto de Red de Intercomunicación de los Pueblos Indios de Oaxaca (RIO)@ El proyecto de Red India de Oaxaca empezó efectivamente en febero-marzo del 2000, con un primer acercamiento a organizaciones indígenas, y con la organización de un primer taller sobre Nuevas Tecnologias y Periodismo Indio. Dentro los elementos que sometemos a evaluación son los siguientes: (1) construcción de una página Web, (2) creación de una lista de información, (3) capacitación a organizaciones y comunidades, y (4) Relación con organizaciones y comunidades.

74. II Meeting - Indigenous Peoples And Natural Resource Management Working Table Tr
Item Discussion of work done on the subsistence use of migratory birdsby indigenous peoples of mexico. This work was to have been
http://www.trilat.org/defunct_tables/ind_people_nat_resources/II_meeting_ind_peo
II Meeting TABLE 10 INDIGENOUS PEOPLES AND NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT WORKING TABLE
Phoenix, Arizona
February 11-12, 1997
Item Report of activities conducted over the past year. Carlos Llorens and Roberto Solis presented information on the status of the work done to date:
  • a database has been structured information is basically being collected on who does what, where and with whom (groups) they are involved-names, organizations, communities, leaders, youth leaders, traditional techniques used, documents are being prepared which should provide a baseline synopsis of the communities
Item Discussion of work done on the subsistence use of migratory birds by indigenous peoples of Mexico. This work was to have been presented by an individual who could not be reached. Item Presentation on the visit of a Mexican delegation to lnuvik, Northwest Territories, Canada. A first-cut video was shown which documented this experience. In it two young Indigenous Mexicans involved in environmental management within their own communities were invited learn about co-management by the Inuit community of lnuvik. They were accompanied by one Mexican government official and one Canadian government official interested in working with communities on shared environmental issues. In lnuvik the visitors observed the Inuvialuit Game Council and the Wildlife Management Advisory Council in action as they dealt with the environmental management of a large area of the Western Arctic. Positive comments were made.

75. "Never Again A Mexico Without Us." - Reports From Chiapas / In Motion Magazine
but because the role of these peoples (Independent indigenous not only in referenceto the indigenous question but to they say Never again a mexico without us
http://www.inmotionmagazine.com/chiapas2.html
Report on an interview with EZLN Sub-Commander "Marcos"
"Never again a Mexico without us."
On the Importance of the
Permanent National Indigenous Congress
by Beto Del Sereno
San Cristobal de las Casas
Chiapas, Mexico
In an exclusive interview with Herman Bellinghausen (published November 25th in La Jornada ), (EZLN Sub-Commander) Marcos was asked to comment on what he thought the impact of the passage and fulfillment of the Agreements of San Andres would be on the EZLN's (Ejercito Zapatista de Liberación Nacional) plans to become a political force. Here Marcos made what Bellinghausen calls a "profound recognition" of the maturity of the Independent Indigenous Movement. "It will be thanks to them that the Zapatistas might see one of their dreams accomplished: that the agreements negotiated through peaceful means have a national impact and be able to benefit, in first instance, the indigenous people of the entire Mexican Nation." Extremely important in terms of strategy is Marcos's statement that he hopes certain sectors of government "among them the (Mexican) Army" recognize and are sensitive to the debt owed to the indigenous peoples by the Mexican Nation "even though they don't put it forward in radical terms." Marcos adds that the EZLN is not just after the inclusion of these agreements into the constitution but mainly after their implementation. Marcos then credits the fact that the EZLN made the right choice of democratic method when it opened up the process of negotiations to those that were directly affected. He said that on this table of negotiations we cannot be the only ones to talk: we have to invite and sit with all those that have to talk on this issue. The EZLN methodology flowed from the reality that the indigenous problems were not ones between the EZLN and the government but between the government and the people that should participate.

76. Diplomacy Monitor: Mexico On The Issue Of Indigenous Peoples
St. Thomas Univeristy School of Law Diplomacy Monitor, mexico On the Issue of IndigenousPeoples Most recent Web posts first Page 1 Return To mexico Sub-Menu.
http://www.diplomacymonitor.com/stu/dm.nsf/nationissued?openform&cat=Mexico|Indi

77. Earth Day Network - Events
took place on April 16 in New York at an indigenous peoples event at indigenous issueswere a main focus of Earth Day events this year in mexico City, due
http://www.earthday.net/events/indigwwreport2001.stm
Take Action Contact Us International Support EDN ... Resources Regional home pages:
Africa

Asia

Australia-Pacific

Canada
...
Webmaster

Earth Day 2001 Worldwide Report
Indigenous Peoples
Index
Earth Day Themes Clean Energy
Network Support

Gov't Commitments
Human Rights ... Regional Reports As a complement to the human rights and the environment campaign, indigenous peoples on four continents released a joint Earth Day Solidarity Statement calling for a global transition to clean energy. The indigenous peoples' Solidarity Statement, which contains a personal account from each of the groups signing the statement, demands energy free of blood and environmental destruction. Public release of the Solidarity Statement took place on April 16 in New York at an indigenous peoples' event at the ninth session of the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development. The release of the statement was accompanied by indigenous activities across the world for Earth Day, including traditional gatherings in four cultural regions of Indonesia, exposure of the militarization of oil zones in indigenous territories of Ecuador, and the promotion of solar energy as an alternative to firewood in indigenous forest communities in Nigeria. Indigenous Earth Day Indigenous issues were a main focus of Earth Day events this year in Mexico City, due to Zapatista movement leader Sub-commandant Marcos' historical visit with Mexico's President to negotiate a peace accord, and the Indigenous Cultural Act that was recently signed into law by the Mexican Congress. Indigenous groups from around the country met to discuss unification of indigenous communities in the Americas. On Earth Day, at the ruins of the Baths of Moctezuma in Bosque Chapultepec, traditional ceremonies starting at dawn were held by indigenous leaders who spent the day discussing how to better treat the environment and debating the Indigenous Cultural Act. One week after Earth Day, indigenous groups marched from the famous Museum of Anthropology to the sculpture of Quetzalcoatl (God of the Eagle and Serpent) in Plaza de la Constituci—n to pay homage to Mother Earth with dance and prayer.

78. Defenders Of The Forests: Amnesty International Report
Bolivia, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras, mexico, Paraguay andPeru) are State Parties to the indigenous and Tribal peoples Convention known
http://www.wrm.org.uy/peoples/amnesty.html
Defenders of the forests
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
Press Release Americas: Indigenous people at high risk of human rights violations AI Index: AMR 01/008/2001
Publish date: 09/08/2001 As the world marks the International Day of the World's Indigenous People, native peoples continue to be the victims of human rights violations including killings and "disappearances" in many parts of the Americas, Amnesty International said today.
"Intimidation, harassment and violent attacks against indigenous communities are frequent occurrences in countries including Honduras, Brazil, Colombia, Guatemala, Mexico and Venezuela," the organization added, calling on governments throughout the region to ensure the rights of indigenous people are fully respected.
In Colombia, indigenous communities find themselves increasingly caught up in the spiralling civil conflict and are targeted for attacks and killings both by army-backed paramilitaries and armed opposition groups accusing them in turns of collaborating with the other side.
Violence and threats against indigenous populations often take place in the context of disputes relating to the lands they live on and to the exploitation, by national and multinational companies, of natural resources on indigenous territories.

79. Special Rapporteur On The Situation Of The Human Rights And Fundamental Freedoms
E/CN.4/2003/90/Add.3). In 2003 he visited mexico and Chile. about allegations of violationsof the human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous peoples.
http://www.unhchr.ch/indigenous/rapporteur.htm

Main
Working Groups
Calendar of meetings
Special Rapporteur ... List of Organizations
Form Information or appeals to the attention of the Special Rapporteur Documents relating to the Special Rapporteur
Publications The Rights of Indigenous Peoples (Fact Sheet #9/Rev.1) United Nations Guide for Indigenous Peoples
Links International Decade International Day Committee on the Rights of the Child, Indigenous Children Discussion Day
MANDATE AND ACTIVITIES OF THE SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR ON THE SITUATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND FUNDAMENTAL FREEDOMS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLE Rodolfo Stavenhagen Over the last two decades the situation of the indigenous peoples worldwide and the enjoyment of their human rights has become a key issue in the international arena. This development is reflected in the establishment of the Working Group on Indigenous Populations (WGIP) in 1982, the proclamation of the International Decade for Indigenous Peoples 1995-2004, by United Nations General Assembly, and the establishment of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues in 2000. In 2001, the Commission on Human Rights, appointed a Special Rapporteur on the situation of the human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous people, Rodolfo Stavenhagen, from Mexico, in response to the growing international concern regarding the marginalization and discrimination against indigenous people worldwide. The mandate, created by Commission on Human Rights resolution

80. SPOTLIGHT: INDIGENOUS PEOPLE LINKS ON MEXICO CONNECT - RON MADER'S UNUSUAL LINKS
SPOTLIGHT indigenous PEOPLE Links to mexico A Feature in mexico Connect - mexico's monthly ezine / magazine devoted to informing about and promoting mexico, her people, culture, history, arts,
http://www.mexconnect.com/mex_/travel/rmader/rmindigenous.html
RON MADER'S UNUSUAL MEXICO LINKS
(Mexico on the Web)
His Bio
His Home Page
Journalist and savvy webmaster Ron Mader sifts through the web to find the most interesting and unusual Mexico-related websites. Ron is the webhost of the popular Planeta.com: Eco Travels in Latin America website http://www.planeta.com and has written about the internet since the early 1990s. Subscribe to our free email update service by sending a blank email to
mexico-on-the-web-subscribe@egroups.com

for reminders and news about upcoming columns.
SPOTLIGHT: INDIGENOUS PEOPLE
TARAHUMARA.ORG
NATIVEWEB

NATIONAL INDIGENOUS INSTITUTE

OTHER TOP CONTENDERS
...
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES AND CONSERVATION

The National Inter-Censual Survey estimates that there are almost 6.8 million indigenous people in Mexico, while the National Indigenous Institution (in an extrapolation from the National Survey) pushes that number up to 10 million -www.sedesol.gob.mx/perfiles/nacional/00_summary.html Whatever figure is used, one definite trend has been an increase in the percentage and absolute number of Mexican citizens who identify themselves as "indigenous." Demographers note that the population of indigenous peoples is no longer declining, but growing at 2.7% annually. Last fall, this column initiated a review of websites focusing on ethnic identity and migration. This month we continue this investigation with a summary of the best online resources highlighting Mexico's indigenous population.

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 4     61-80 of 98    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter