8-5-2b
8-5-2b
8-5-2b
2
Indigenous Peoples of the World b
Indigenous peoples inhabit large areas of the Earth's surface. Spread across the world from
the Arctic to the South Pacific, they number, at a rough estimate, some 300 million people.
Indigenous or Aboriginal peoples are so-called because they were living on their lands before
settlers came from elsewhere; they are the descendants—according to one definition—of
those who inhabited a country or a geographical region at the time when people of different
cultures or ethnic origins arrived. The new arrivals later became dominant through conquest,
occupation, settlement, or other means.
relatively successful, in most of the world indigenous peoples are still actively seeking
recognition of their identities and ways of life.
(page 2 of 3)
8.5.2
Indigenous Peoples of the World b
Africa
♦ Kung San of the Kalahari Desert (Botswana, Angola,
Namibia)
♦ Berbers of Morocco
♦ Hadzabe People of Tanzania
♦ Mbuti (Pygmies) of Zaire
♦ Maasai in East Africa
♦ Bantu and other ethnic minorities in Somalia
♦ Ogoni in Nigeria
♦ Tuareg people of Algeria, Libya, Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso
♦ Sahrawi of the Western Sahara
Asia
♦ Ainu people of Japan
♦ Assyrians of the Middle East (Aramaic speaking Christians)
♦ The Kazakhs, Mongols, Tajik, Tibetans, Ugyur, and Eurasian Nomads of
Kazakhstan, eastern Russia, and China
♦ The Miao and Hmong of southern China, Laos and Thailand
♦ The Shan and Karen peoples of Burma /Myanmar
♦ The Chakma of Pakistan
♦ The Kurds of Iraq, Iran, Syria, Turkey and parts of the former Soviet
Union
Australasia
♦ Maori of New Zealand
♦ Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders of Australia