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Traditional Customary Laws and Indigenous Peoples in Asia
For years, traditional laws – or customary laws – in Asia have been eroded. This report argues that remaining customary laws should be retained and discusses the extent to which their erosion can be reversed. Traditional Customary Laws and Indigenous Peoples in Asiafocuses primarily on two types of customary law systems – personal or family law, and land and resource rights law – and considers the complex situation, which is far from uniform throughout Asia. For example, in some areas customary law systems and procedures are generally respected, while in other parts of Asia, customary law has been so eroded that it is virtually non-existent and unrecognized by governments. There are also many examples that fall between these two situations.
Additional Information
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Last updated | 3 ສິງຫາ 2018 |
Created | 31 ກໍລະກົດ 2018 |
ຮູບແບບເອກະສານ | |
ການອະນຸຍາດ | CC-BY-SA-4.0 |
ຊື່ | Traditional Customary Laws and Indigenous Peoples in Asia |
ລາຍລະອຽດ |
For years, traditional laws – or customary laws – in Asia have been eroded. This report argues that remaining customary laws should be retained and discusses the extent to which their erosion can be reversed. Traditional Customary Laws and Indigenous Peoples in Asiafocuses primarily on two types of customary law systems – personal or family law, and land and resource rights law – and considers the complex situation, which is far from uniform throughout Asia. For example, in some areas customary law systems and procedures are generally respected, while in other parts of Asia, customary law has been so eroded that it is virtually non-existent and unrecognized by governments. There are also many examples that fall between these two situations. |
ພາສາຂອງແຫຼ່ງຂໍ້ມູນ |
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