Much controversy has existed over the claims of Native Americans
and other indigenous peoples that they have a right--based on
original occupancy of land, historical transfers of sovereignty,
and principles of self-determination--to a political status
separate from the states in which they now find themselves
embedded. How valid are these claims on moral grounds?
Burke Hendrix tackles these thorny questions in this book.
Rather than focusing on the legal and constitutional status of
indigenous nations within the states now ruling them, he starts at
a more basic level, interrogating fundamental justifications for
political authority itself. He shows that historical claims of land
ownership and prior sovereignty cannot provide a sufficient basis
for challenging the authority of existing states, but that our
natural moral duties to aid other persons in danger can justify
rights to political separation from states that fail to protect
their citizens as they should.
Actual attempts at political separation must be carefully
managed through well-defined procedural mechanisms, however, to
foster extensive democratic deliberation about the nature of the
political changes at stake. Using such procedures, Hendrix argues,
indigenous peoples should be able to withdraw politically from the
states currently ruling them, even to the point of choosing full
independence.
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