References
- African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights. (2005). Report submitted in accordance with the resolution on the rights of indigenous populations/communities in Africa. Adopted by the African Commission at its 28th ordinary session held in Cotonou, Benin, in October 2000.
- African Union. (2009). Convention for the protection and assistance of internally displaced persons in Africa. Adopted by the special summit of the Union held in Kampala, Uganda, October 22, 2009.
- Anaya, J. (1996). Indigenous peoples in international law. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
- Anaya, J. (2014). ‘ The situation of indigenous peoples in Canada’, Report of the special rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples, 27th session, A/HRC/27/52/Add.2, United Nations: Human Rights Council.
- Bryan, M. (2010). Americas. In P. Taneja (Ed.), State of the world’s minority and indigenous peoples: Events of 2009 (pp. 74–99). London:. Minority Rights Group International.
- Centre for Minority Rights Development [Kenya]. (2003). Communication 276/2003, Re: Endorois Welfare Council v Kenya. [ruling delivered on February 4, 2010].
- Dessalegn, R. (2011). Land to investors: Large-scale land transfers in Ethiopia. FSS Policy Debates Series, No. 1, Addis Ababa: Forum for Social Studies.
- Eriksen, T. H. (2002). Ethnicity and nationalism: Anthropological perspectives (2nd ed.). London: Pluto Pres.
- Erk, J. (2016). Nations, nationalities, and peoples of Ethiopia: The ethnopolitics of ethnofederalism in Ethiopia. Ethnopolitics. doi:10.1080/17449057.2016.1254409.
- Fessha, Y. (2016). The original sin of Ethiopian federalism. Ethnopolitics. doi:10.1080/17449057.2016.1254410.
- Fukui, K., Kurimoto, E., & Shigeta, M. (Eds.). (1997, December 12–17). Ethiopia in broader perspective. Papers of the XIIIth International Conference of Ethiopian Studies. Kyoto: Shokado Book Sellers.
- Gambella Regional-State. (2004). Letter of clan leaders and elders addressed to the president of the Ethiopia Government. 26 April 1996.
- Hall, T. D., & Fenelon, J. V. (2015). Indigenous peoples and globalization: Resistance and revitalization. London: Routledge.
- Jalata, A. (2005). State terrorism and globalization: The cases of Ethiopia and Sudan. International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 46(1–2), 79–102.
- Jalata, A. (2013). Indigenous peoples and the capitalist world system: Researching, knowing and promoting social justice. Sociology Mind, 3(2), 156–178.
- Kaufman, F. (2014). The man who stolen the Nile: An Ethiopian billionaire’s outrageous land grab. Harper’s Magazine, pp. 35–42.
- Kwokwo Baruma, A. (2010). Land rights of indigenous peoples in Africa: With special focus on central, Eastern and Southern Africa. Copenhagen: IWGIA, 2010, 57.
- Kymlicka, W. (2001). Politics in the vernacular, nationalism, multiculturalism and citizenship. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Laird, K. (2006). MDG reports and indigenous peoples: Desk review. New York: UN permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues.
- Lavers, T. (2013). Implications of the ‘land grab’ for state-society relations in Africa; exploring the relationship between agricultural investment and state sovereignty in Ethiopia. Baltimore, MD: United Nations Research Institute for Social Development.
- Majang Zone Security Administration Bureau. (2013). Investors-local community land ownership controversy, No 628/656, 03 November 2013.
- Makki, F. (2013). Development by dispossession: Terra nullius and the social-ecology of new enclosures in Ethiopia. Rural Sociology, 79(1), 79–103.
- Markakis, J. (2011). Ethiopia: The last two frontiers. Oxford: James Curry.
- Pact Ethiopia. (2012). ‘Socio-economic’, Gilo sub basin of Gambella integrated land use planning study project, ( Vol. VI). Addis Ababa: Gambella Land Utilization and Environmental Protection Authority.
- Seyoum, M. S. (2010). Issues and challenges in the federal constitution making process. In A. Habtu (Ed.), Ethiopian federalism: Principle, process and practice (pp. 42–58). Addis Ababa: Addis Ababa University Press.
- Seyoum, M. S. (2014). The inter-regional migration phenomenon: Response of the indigenes of Majang nationality zone in Gambella region, Ethiopia. Ethiopian Journal of Federal Studies, 2(1), 67–94.
- Seyoum, M. S. (2015a). Federalism at the margins of the Ethiopian state: The lived experience of the Majang people (Submitted PhD dissertation). Addis Ababa: Center for Federal Studies, School of Law and Governance Studies, Addis Ababa University.
- Seyoum, M. S. (2015b). Self-rule and societal insecurity in federal Ethiopia: Case study of Majang in Gambella region. In A. Kefale & A. Fiseha (Eds.), Federalism and local government in Ethiopia (pp. 153–182). Addis Ababa: UNDP and Centre for Federal Studies, Addis Ababa University.
- Seyoum, M. S. (2015c). The nexus between land-grabbing, livelihood insecurity and conflict in federal Ethiopia: The case of Majang in the Gambella region. African Peace and Conflict Journal, 8(1), 53–67.
- Stauder, J. (1971), The Majangir: Ecology and society of the Southwest Ethiopian people. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- United Nations. (2009). States of the world’s indigenous peoples. Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Division for Social Policy and Development, Secretariat of the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, ST/ESA/328, New York.
- Weldegebriel, D. (2012). Land rights in Ethiopia: Ownership, equity, and liberty in land use rights. Rome: FIG Working Week, Customary and Group Land Rights.
- Wiessner, S. (2011). The cultural rights of indigenous peoples: Achievements and challenges. The European Journal of International Law, 22(1), 121–140.