Examples of the lack of compliance with human rights laws are given in segments on the Mississippi voter registration project of 1961- 1964, the Canadian civil rights conflict over a massive hydroelectric project on James Bay which pits the rights and culture of the indigenous Cree and Inuits against Hydro Quebec, a government-owned energy company, the Army School of the Americas, Escuela de las Americas, in Fort Benning, Georgia which is becoming known as School of the Assassins where dictators such as Noriega are trained to conduct wars, and, the land tenure of indigenous peoples of Oahu Island, Hawaii, including a report on one of 32 homesteads in Hawaii.
"Examples of the lack of compliance with human rights laws are given in segments on the Mississippi voter registration project of 1961- 1964, the Canadian civil rights conflict over a massive hydroelectric project on James Bay which pits the rights and culture of the indigenous Cree and Inuits against Hydro Quebec, a government-owned energy company, the Army School of the Americas, Escuela de las Americas, in Fort Benning, Georgia which is becoming known as School of the Assassins where dictators such as Noriega are trained to conduct wars, and, the land tenure of indigenous peoples of Oahu Island, Hawaii, including a report on one of 32 homesteads in Hawaii."@en
"Four short films on human rights violations in the U.S. and Canada. Contains: 1. Civil rights - the civil rights movement in the 1960's -- 2. James Bay - Cree and Inuit struggle to protect their land from Quebec's James Bay hydroelectric project -- 3. School of the Americas - A military school in Georgia trains known human rights abusers, including dictators and drug runners -- 4. Native Hawaiians - aboriginal Hawaiians fight for the right to live on native lands."
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