Seeking Redress in the Courts: Indigenous Land Rights and Judicial Decisions in Malaysia

Author:

AIKEN S. ROBERT,LEIGH COLIN H.

Abstract

AbstractMalaysia's indigenous peoples continue to suffer numerous grievous injustices, including appropriation of their ancestral lands and socio-economic deprivation. In large part because their voices of resistance to development policies have gone unheard by the authorities, a growing number of individuals and communities have taken their grievances to the nation's courts. In particular, they have pleaded for judicial intervention to address alleged breaches of statutory land and other rights by governments and their contractors, and for recognition of native title at common law. In the landmark 1996Adongcase, the High Court ruled that Malaysian jurisprudence recognizes native title, thus bringing Malaysia into line with a number of other countries that share an English-derived legal system. The concept has been upheld in subsequent High Court, Court of Appeal, and Federal Court judgments. In spite of the rulings in favour of indigenous parties, the federal government, along with certain of the state governments, has continued to adopt an adversarial approach to indigenous land issues. An encouraging development is the reported willingness of governments in Perak and Selangor to tackle indigenous land rights issues through mediation rather than litigation. This paper summarizes seven court cases concerning alleged breaches of statutory rights and four cases dealing with native title at common law; it also looks at certain issues arising from the cases, as well as the responses of communities and governments to the various court judgments.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,History,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference97 articles.

1. Beyond Sagong Bin Tasi: The Use of Traditional Knowledge to Prove Aboriginal Customary Rights over Land in Peninsular Malaysia and its Challenges;Subramaniam;Malayan Law Journal,2007

2. Nor Anak Nyawai and Ors v Borneo Pulp Plantation Sdn Bhd and Ors;Bulan;Australian Indigenous Law Reporter,2001

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