Here we'll talk about general sites and sources dedicated to indigenous law, including links to other people's better-developed pages...
The EISIL (Electronic Information System for International Law) site is good.
It is a well-maintained portal site, linking you to primary documents (chiefly international conventions and declarations), websites (including several very useful United Nations sites) and research resources. There are two overlapping pathways:
Home > International Human Rights > Indigenous & Minority Rights
Home > Individuals & Groups > Ethnic Groups, Minorities & Indigenous Peoples
WorldLII indigenous law resources link you to resources by country, as well as to international material and secondary sources.
The Center for World Indigeous Studies (CWIS) site includes the Chief George Manuel Memorial Library, which contains full text documents,reports, and publications from American Indian nations and indigenous nations from around the world. Don't yet know how this works but people seem to link to it...
Indigenous Peoples: University of Waikato Law Library portal - it's nice.
Maybe a separate link to the UN sites here but they're in EISIL...?
Check the WorldLII/NZLII sources and also:
Indigenous peoples and the law note the date…? note also the links
Maori Studies Guides (University of Auckland Library) include general research strategies and references to specific resources
Check the WorldLII/AustLII sources and also:
Indigenous Law Centre (University of New South Wales Faculty of Law) - useful lonks on the Resources page, plus referenes and moe specific links with each topic on the Research page.
Native title infobase (Australia)
In their own words: The Native Title Infobase includes selected material commencing from 1839 to the present day and covers all aspects of native title. It gives reference to Australian material including journal articles, book chapters, books, conference papers, reports and press clippings. It also includes relevant material from other jurisdictions such as New Zealand, United States, Canada, Africa and Asia.
Use the Power Search option - it gives you a lot of flexibility.
?? doesn't seem to have material beyond 2009?
Indigenous Peoples and the Law (Australia – Parliamentary library)
This guide contains links to Internet resources and documents in the area of federal law and indigenous peoples, as well as providing links to other guides and directories which contain material on State and Territory and overseas law.
Check the WorldLII/CanLII sources and also:
First Nations Periodical Index
In their own words: The First Nations Periodical Index contains journals of mainly Canadian Native content. This Index is a tool providing access to information about First Nations for students (high school or university), educators, instructors and researchers.
Here we'll give a few clues about finding stuff on the catalogue - useful search terms, how you follow up related subject headings
Plus a LONZ tip.
Plus a few tips about finding articles - the key index databases plus caveats as to which key journals they don't index - check that list; maybe something on Summon/Google Scholar plus non-law search engines to pick up the multi-disciplinary stuff? Plus any particularly useful hybrid resources (Native title infobase, for example) already mentioned in the dedicated sites section.
Here we'll talk about the specific databases and report series - again, with overlap from the dedicated sites.
Will we? Probably better to have a general section, and regional sections, which can deal with primary and secondary sources - which is what AUL & n WUL do.