Topic > The indigenous peoples of the world - 1434

Who are the indigenous peoples of the world? In your response, do you explore the reasons why some colonized peoples identify as indigenous while others, who occupied their lands before the European invasion, do not? Also use examples to explain your answer! European governments around the world are currently working especially hard to atone for their previous sins against the indigenous peoples of their countries. To do this effectively, European governments have worked to create operational definitions that allow them to identify indigenous populations according to pre-established criteria. Npt all indigenous peoples agree that their identity should be definable, as they believe that their identity is made up of their cultural history, traditions, teachings and community. While most indigenous peoples have worked hard to establish themselves as an identity socially and politically, some indigenous peoples do not. This lack of identification may not be entirely their fault, but it may depend entirely on the government of the period in which they lived in their specific parts of the world. The creation of a definition and operational criteria to identify indigenous peoples is seen as a necessity by European-oriented governments as it helps them to scientifically establish who the world's indigenous peoples are. All European governments are taking steps to atone for their ancestors' mistreatment of the indigenous populations they sought to conquer during periods of colonization. For governments to make amends fully and appropriately, they need to have a working definition to decide who exactly counts as an Indigenous person. Attempting to create this definition, however, proved to be a challenge as governments m...... middle of paper ...... These guys then got the short end of the stick again in the 1970s of the nineteenth century when the Homeland The Court Judging on rights, the Moriori lost again, as New Zealand judges believed that 1840 - the year the Treaty of Waitangi was signed - was the reference point for determining customary landowners . At that time, which marked the beginning of British colonization, the Maori had become owners through conquest and occupation.” This example defines how the system to properly define who the correct indigenous peoples of that place were failed, the Moriori peoples were unable to reclaim their land or heritage, simply because they were invaded and conquered before the colonial takeover of the English Empire. This means that the British government is not particularly willing to atone for land plunder because it did not directly cause the misfortune there..