HOW CAN WE RESPECT INDIGENOUS PEOPLE’S RIGHTS?
HOW CAN WE RESPECT INDIGENOUS PEOPLE’S RIGHTS? Respecting the rights of Indigenous Peoples (IPs) is not merely a matter of issuing government titles or passing laws. It is a matter of recognizing historical justice — and understanding that many ancestral lands were already owned long before the modern State existed. In the Philippines, our legal framework is actually among the most progressive in the world. The Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Act (IPRA) and the famous Cariño Doctrine affirm the concept of “Native Title,” meaning that lands occupied since time immemorial are presumed never to have been public lands at all. The Certificate of Ancestral Domain Title (CADT), therefore, does not grant ownership; it merely recognizes an ownership that already existed. As of recent estimates, more than 220 ancestral domain titles covering over 5.4 million hectares have already been issued nationwide, benefiting more than one million Indigenous people, equivalent to roughly 16 percent of the cou...