Contrarius Series: Law & Social Justice
Vol. 1 No. 2 (2026): Contrarius Series: Law & Social Justice

The Rights of Indigenous Peoples in the Development of Tourism Destinations: A Human Rights Perspective




Article Info

Publish Date
08 Mar 2026

Abstract

Indigenous peoples are the ones most capable of determining whether a culture changes. Whether these communities can maintain their customs and traditions in an increasingly modern era will determine if that culture continues to survive. Despite this, in practice, Indigenous peoples are often treated as objects of tourism rather than as subjects or main actors. To address this challenge, an approach that respects participation and collective rights is needed to help Indigenous communities become successful participants in tourism. This research uses a normative legal method to explore possible solutions. Furthermore, tourism development must be grounded in a strong legal foundation, such as Law No. 39 of 1999 on Human Rights, Article 18B, paragraph (2), of the 1945 Constitution, and international principles such as UNDRIP, to protect the rights of Indigenous peoples. With these legal protections and if implemented properly, tourism can serve as a tool for empowerment and cultural preservation through harmonized regulations, meaningful participation, and the active role of Indigenous communities.

Copyrights © 2026






Journal Info

Abbrev

LSJCP

Publisher

Subject

Education Energy Environmental Science Health Professions Law, Crime, Criminology & Criminal Justice Public Health Social Sciences

Description

Contrarius Series: Law & Social Justice is an Proceedings Open Access publication series dedicated to archiving conference proceedings in all areas related to Law, Crime, Environment, Energy, Education, Economic, Tourism and Social Justice. The Contrarius Series: Law & Social Justice covers the ...