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Indigenous communities framed as excluded and disrespected in decision-making
Excluding Indigenous groups from procedural legitimacy by omitting their legal role in blocking the referendum
Indigenous communities are framed as included through ownership and loan access, though only in relation to project financing
Indigenous peoples are implicitly portrayed as being granted exclusive cultural legitimacy in public institutions
framed as vulnerable to external manipulation and historical victimization
Indigenous Peoples are framed as rightfully included in constitutional processes
Indigenous groups are portrayed as rightful participants in democratic process
Indigenous communities are framed as excluded from timely public health protection and decision-making
Indigenous Peoples are framed as excluded from a major political process that affects their rights
framed as being deliberately bypassed in a major constitutional process
framed as rightful treaty partners seeking inclusion in national dialogue
marginalised despite central legal role
framed as systematically excluded, displaced, and silenced by state and corporate forces
Indigenous leadership is portrayed as trustworthy and morally authoritative in managing the investigation
Indigenous communities are portrayed as rightfully included and in control of their own narratives
Indigenous leadership is framed as withholding information, inviting suspicion despite cultural and legal justifications
Indigenous individuals framed as disproportionately vulnerable to going missing
Mana whenua concerns framed as excluded from decision-making process
Indigenous communities are portrayed as being historically wronged and currently seeking recognition and closure
Indigenous Peoples are portrayed as systematically excluded from cultural continuity and family integrity in state care
Indigenous communities portrayed as rightfully included in decision-making
Indigenous people framed as disproportionately excluded from housing and vulnerable to systemic harm
Historical representations of Indigenous Peoples are framed as rooted in cultural corruption and appropriation
Indigenous Peoples are framed as historically excluded but now being re-centred through cultural reclamation
Indigenous community framed as excluded from decision-making and environmental protection
framed as central to conservation and reconciliation
Indigenous content is framed as rightfully included and protected in national media policy
Framing Indigenous communities as meaningfully included in environmental decision-making
Indigenous children and communities are framed as historically and intergenerationally endangered by state actions
Indigenous Peoples are framed as being included, heard, and validated through international moral recognition
Indigenous Peoples are framed as rightfully included in legal and policy processes, with enforceable rights to consultation and co-operation
Indigenous Peoples are framed as partially acknowledged but marginalized in decision-making
Indigenous concerns are acknowledged but marginalized in favor of development momentum
Indigenous women are framed as systematically excluded and disproportionately targeted by the criminal justice system
portrayed as being unfairly privileged or excluded from norms
Indigenous communities are framed as marginalized and structurally neglected
Framing Indigenous Peoples as included and celebrated within national institutions
Indigenous remote communities are portrayed as under severe health threat due to systemic neglect