Contesting Subjects: International Legal Discourses on Terrorism and Indigenous Peoples’ Human Rights

Abstract International legal discourses clash in violent ways within the state. For example, the international discourse on human rights identifies some individuals who oppose state-sanctioned projects as Indigenous peoples while the international discourse about terrorism may identify them as terrorists. These clashes are occurring throughout the world, particularly surrounding extractive resource projects, but this article considers one example from the Philippines where some B'laan individuals and communities oppose the Tampakan Copper-Gold Mine, and examines how various actors identify those individuals and communities. It explores how some identify them as Indigenous peoples while others identify them as terrorists. In highlighting the violent effects of international law, it investigates how discourse inhibits appreciation of violent erasures and the continuing coloniality of extractive resource development.

In 2017, President Duterte of the Philippines, designated the New People's Army (the NPA), the military arm of the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), a terrorist organization. 1 Duterte then identified 600 NPA or CCP individuals as members, funders, or supporters, which included: Indigenous rights advocates, the United Nations (UN) Special Rapporteur for the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, and a former member of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues. 2 Duterte's terrifying misrecognition of UN actors and others who support Indigenous peoples' rights as terrorists (or supporters of terrorism) demonstrates a clash of two international legal discourses. 3 One international legal discourse is about terrorism while the other is about human rights. When international law clashes within the state, it can (partially) synthesize to support state interests.
This article investigates how international law on counterterrorism clashes with international law on human rights, particularly Indigenous peoples' human rights, as both become enmeshed in "liberal and neoliberal discourses of democracy and security". 4 Examining how international law is enacted within the nation state demonstrates, as Eslava and Pahuja note, that "making and remaking the state is a project of international law". 5 The synthesis of international legal discourses is investigated through a case study on Indigenous resistance to a natural resource development project, the Tampakan Copper-Gold Mine Project (Tampakan mine), as one example of Indigenous resistance leading to Duterte's designation of the CPP-NPA as a terrorist organization. As Indigenous resistance did not comply with state-approved processes of dispute resolution, that resistance could be identified as a threat to national peace and security, or as terrorism. On the other hand, human rights advocates attempt to identify this resistance according to the international human rights of Indigenous peoples. As both discourses draw on international law to promote a version of national security and democratic state building, both discourses create subjects to advocate for a form of supposedly legitimate state-sanctioned violence. 6 Both discourses uphold their vision of a peaceful and secure state, externalize violence elsewhere, and inhibit recognition that they are involved in reconstructing violent institutions. One way of making visible the inhibiting effects of discourse is to excavate how they selectively emphasize characteristics of individuals to construct them as legally identifiable subjects. In constructing these subjects as objects of state concern, it reproduces the conditions of exclusion. These discourses partially synthesize within state discourse to legitimate the (re)creation of the non-state, illegitimately violent Other. 7 I am not claiming that human rights, Indigenous rights, or Indigenous peoples' advocates are wrong or misguided. The argument presented here builds on the notion that international human rights law is powerful because it is driven by its excess, or by the inability to be completely or fully defined. 8 When Indigenous peoples' human rights become discourse within neoliberal state legal systems that are heavily invested in counterterrorism measures and extractive natural resources projects, a type of "slow violence", 9 state actors can adopt and invest in it. Even if advocates intend to use international human rights to draw attention to state violence, injustice, exclusions, and hierarchical formations, when international human rights becomes discourse it "accepts the state as the necessary venue for democratization" and "augments state power". 10 That discourse helps the state uphold, regulate, and define legitimate "Indigenous peoples" actions as it further erases sub-state tribal and native selfidentities. 11 State investment in these discourses is never totally captured, and neither is the erasure discussed here. It indicates that some powerful institutions will be able to successfully (if temporarily) capture the excess or surplus values in violent ways that help remake the state.
The next section, Part I, provides some background on how international law was involved in the creation of the Philippines. It introduces and analyses the controversies and violence surrounding the Tampakan mine. Part II then considers how international laws clash within state discourse. Part III evaluates how some B'laan individuals and communities, those who can be identified as "Lumads", became identified as "Indigenous peoples" or "terrorists" when they opposed the development of the Tampakan mine. 12 Part IV then analyses how these clashing international laws have been synthesized within state discourse. This article ends with final remarks suggesting that there is no clear legal solution, but paying attention to the violence in the system and the plasticity of identity suggests that alternative forms of alliance may be strengthened.

I. The International Legal Construction of the Philippines
The creation of the Philippines as a state involved an international treaty. 13 Following the Spanish-American War, the Spanish empire entered into the Treaty of Paris with the United States. In that instrument, the Spanish ceded and sold the colony of the Philippines to the United States. 14 The Americans then suppressed the Filipino independence movement, quelled the anti-imperialist insurgency, and established the Insular Government of the Philippines. 15 Following the Second World War, the Philippines gained independence. 16 Despite the Philippines' political independence, American citizens retained parity rights equivalent to the rights of Filipino citizens. This enabled capitalized and industrialized American mining firms to dominate the Philippines' mining sector. 17 In 1966, Ferdinand Marcos became president. He initiated the "Filipinization" of the mining industry, which furthered the capitalization of natural resources (primarily for Marcos's benefit). 18 At this time the CPP was formed, along with its military branch, the NPA. 19 According to the United States Department of State, the CPP-NPA "seeks to overthrow the Philippine government in favor of a new state led by the working class and to expel US influence from the Philippines". 20 It has been active since the 1960s. However, as a result of the CPP-NPA's recent actions, the Philippines has recently adopted counterterrorism laws that are consistent with international anti-terrorism laws that conflict with human rights, especially Indigenous peoples' rights. The creation and recreation of the state enabled that.
In 1986, the People Power Revolution overthrew the Marcos regime and instituted democratic practice through the passage of the 1987 Constitution. 21 While it is claimed that "Lumad" and other Indigenous populations "were not colonized", 22 the 1987 Constitution made them subjects of the state and explicitly "recognizes and promotes the rights of indigenous cultural communities within the framework of national unity and development" (emphasis added). 23 It recognizes their rights within the state framework to legitimate the state and its legal institutions. The state system also embraced the Regalian doctrine, which is the domestic analogue of permanent sovereignty over natural resources. 24 The Constitution mentions "indigenous cultural communities", but not "Indigenous peoples" or "Lumads". As subjects of the state, they can claim rights through state-based processes. Commentators have criticized laws for centralizing state power. Part of the problem is that when states recognize Indigenous rights, or grant rights to indigenous cultural communities, the state and its legal disciplinary system are legitimized. 25 Legal systems are violent hierarchies that rely on institutions that inhibit the appreciation of violence. 26 They are also exclusionary. Those who cannot self-identify as "indigenous cultural communities", or refuse to use the state-sanctioned legal processes, risk becoming viewed as the non-state, illegitimate, and violent Other.
Following the 1987 Constitution, the government "embraced sweeping liberal economic reforms as a way of catching up with the country's neighboring Asian tigers". 27  The Mining Act makes it the state's "responsibility" to "promote" the "rational exploration, development, utilization and conservation" of mineral resources with support from "the private sector" to "enhance national growth" while safeguarding "the environment" and "rights of affected communities". 31 It also guarantees that indigenous cultural communities must consent to mining activities. 32 The IPRA and its regulations bolster the consent requirements. 33 Its drafters drew inspiration from the 1993 United Nations Draft Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the International Labour Organization's Convention No. 169. 34 As Justice Cuno notes, the "IPRA amalgamates the Philippine category of ICCs [indigenous cultural communities] with the international category of IPs [Indigenous peoples]". 35 It regulates those individuals and communities as "indigenous cultural communities/Indigenous peoples (ICCs/IPs)". 36 It provides ICCs/ IPs with property rights and procedural safeguards, such as the right to free, prior, and informed consent. 37 Because the state was influenced by international law on Indigenous peoples, commentators writing from an international legal perspective uphold the IPRA as significant for Indigenous peoples internationally. 38 However, some domestic commentators are more sceptical about the state-based processes. Camba argues that when the IPRA created the National Commission on Indigenous Peoples (NCIP), it provided experts with decisionmaking powers that favoured extractive development in ways that bypassed democratic processes. 39  and demarcate lands; to approve mining grants; 40 to manipulate processes in favour companies and the government; 41 and operates primarily to legitimate the IPRA to ICCs/IPs. 42 The IPRA grants rights as it facilitates natural resource exploitation, which is consistent with neoliberalism. 43 Additionally, the ability to claim these rights requires compliance with state-sanctioned processes. These laws require discipline and the processes are violent, but when implemented through institutions, recognition of that violence is "inhibited", or only partially recognized by those who enact it. 44 This is not necessarily, or always, "bad": those who comply with the law may legitimate their interest alongside the neoliberal state. Because the IPRA and state law facilitate natural resource exploitation, those who challenge the law or refuse to submit to forms of state-sanctioned violence have various options. They can return to international law; specifically, they can rely on international human rights law. If they refuse to use that discourse, they can be identified as threats to state legitimacy. They may, in fact, be identified as terrorists. Although there are many examples of this from within the Philippines, Indigenous resistance to the Tampakan mine exemplifies how international law on terrorism and Indigenous peoples' rights has been deployed to identify those who oppose its development. If ever developed, the Tampakan mine will be in Mindanao, the southernmost Philippine Island. It was first proposed in the mid-1990s, and at that time some touted it as the future of mining consultation of Indigenous communities. 45 Today, it is the epicentre for allegations that the state and developers are involved in extra-judicial killings, funding paramilitary activities, and other human rights abuses. 46 In the 1990s, the Western Mining Corporation (Western) began exploring the Tampakan region and in 1993, confirmed that a mine could be viable. 47 Western engaged in agreement making with provinces, municipalities, councils, and leaders of the B'laan communities. In 1998, a geographer for Western, Stephen Davis, published an article on agreements among Western and B'laan communities. 48 He claimed that Western entered into multiple agreements with traditional B'laan leaders in ways that mirrored traditional B'laan agreement making. 49 Davis also asserted that if the development proceeded a "small number of people [would be] potentially affected" and Western would obtain their "informed consent" and provide "fair compensation". 50 It was promising.
John Smith's fieldwork from the early 2000s questioned Davis's account. According to Smith, there was increasing dissatisfaction with the proposed development and the agreements. Smith surmised that "the company might be seeking B'laan customs to fit with mining practices rather than the other way around". 51 He explained that increasing dissatisfaction with the development was a "smokescreen for deeper political machinations" and, perhaps, it was a "tacit reflection of left-wing opposition to the state strategy of topdown development by means of multi-national corporate investment in exchange for rights to land, minerals, etc." 52 A major difference between Smith's and Davis's accounts (aside from Davis's employment) is that Smith's fieldwork occurred after some B'laan communities had become the named plaintiffs in a class action lawsuit against Western.
La Bugal-B'Laan Tribal Association v. Ramos (Ramos) started in 1997, and lasted until 2004. 53 The plaintiffs argued that Western's agreement with the state gave a foreign company control of natural resources in contravention of the Regalian doctrine and the 1987 Constitution. 54 The Supreme Court initially sided with the plaintiffs. 55 As proceedings were underway, however, Western sold its interests to a corporation organized under Filipino law, Sagittarius Mines Incorporated (SMI). 56 Because a Filipino company extracting Filipino natural resources would be consistent with Filipino sovereignty, the Court reversed its decision. 57 Even though Ramos turned on a narrow constitutional issue about foreign ownership of state resources, 58 it did not necessarily protect local communities or prevent international interests from benefitting at their expense.
The failure of state-sanctioned legal processes to stop the development inspired a range of anti-mining actions, 59 including state-sanctioned legal discourse, international human rights law, and Indigenous resistance. Even if imperialism, colonialism, and international law had been formative for the Philippines, as Ramos was being decided, international law and terrorist activities were influencing the state in new ways.

II. International law in state discourse
Before Ramos was decided in 2004, the Philippines was caught in a wave of terrorist activity. It involved international law on terrorism. Following 9/11, President Bush of the 50  United States declared a "War on Terror, leading the US Federal Government to designate the NPA as a terrorist organization". 60 While terrorism had been discussed but never universally defined in international law, 61 the UN Security Council began passing resolutions to set standards for state-based counterterrorism measures. 62 In 2004, the UN Security Council adopted a resolution on Iraq, enabling a "multinational force" to "take all necessary measures to contribute to the maintenance of security and stability in Iraq", including "preventing and deterring terrorism". 63 The US spearheaded that multinational force with a "coalition of the willing". The Philippines was a member of the coalition. It remains an ally of the US even though the US had colonized the Philippines and, in 2002, President Macapagal-Arroyo of the Philippines allowed US troops to "conduct joint training exercises" with their armed forces on Filipino soil. 64 However, the Philippines' willingness changed when the Islamic Army of Iraq kidnapped an overseas Filipino worker in 2004. Despite US objections, President Macapagal-Arroyo accepted their demands and withdrew from the coalition of the willing. 65 After changing its approach to international counterterrorism, an anti-terror bill was introduced in the Philippines' House of Representatives, which became the 2007 Human Security Act (HSA). 66 Critics of the HSA claimed that President Macapagal-Arroyo used it to appease the US "as her alliance with the Americans was key to keeping herself in power". 67 The UN Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms, Martin Scheinin, and Human Rights Watch both questioned whether the HSA's overly broad definition of "terrorism" threatened human rights. 68 Despite concerns, in another report, Human Rights Watch claimed that violent Islamist groups had caused over 1,700 casualties in the Philippines since 2000. 69 It asserted that the Philippines must bring the perpetrators to justice. The HSA provided a basis for doing so. Notwithstanding the many criticisms of that legislation, "the police and military have never attempted to use" it because its safeguard provisions stringently penalized wrongful accusations or detention. 70 That safeguard would later be removed in 2020.
As the Philippines addressed the War on Terror, UN actors became more directly involved in advocating for Indigenous peoples' rights in the Philippines. Many treated ICCs/IPs as if they were already subjects of international legal discourse called "Indigenous peoples". International legal discourse on Indigenous people's rights had influenced the IPRA, but the failure of state law to prevent the development of the Tampakan mine was seen as undermining Indigenous peoples' rights. Accordingly, the first UN Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Rodolfo Stavenhagen, addressed the mine development. He identified and legitimated the B'laan as Indigenous peoples, asserted that Western infringed their rights, and said they had not consented because "their leaders were tricked by the authorities into signing agreements which they could not fully understand and which would have not benefitted them". 71 As the IPRA was inspired by international law, the B'laan appear like Indigenous peoples for purposes of the international legal discourse. While trickery and deceit in obtaining B'laan consent may have been involved, the form of Stavenhagen's narrative is problematic. According to Makau Mutua, human rights advocacy depends on this savages-victims-saviours metaphor, which reproduces a colonial pattern that justifies intervention. 72 Even without Stavenhagen intending it, his discourse constructs the "leaders" as victims and dupes for international human rights law purposes. Human rights advocates then positioned themselves as saviours by reconstructing state legality in accordance with human rights, even though the Philippines's IPRA had adopted some of the most protective rights for ICCs/IPs, and legal processes had authorized the Tampakan mine as protecting national interests as it derogated from ICC/IP rights. The problem that Mutua pointed out is that, even if this appears to be helpful advocacy, it reproduces a "damning metaphor". 73 Doing so upholds the state as a neutral, passive, or empty vessel, and seeks to reconstruct the state in accordance with Western liberal values that undercuts different forms of agency, planning, and organization.
In 2007, the UN General Assembly endorsed the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP). The following year, Robert Goodland and Clive Wicks used the B'laan's resistance to the Tampakan mine as a case study in their report titled Philippines: Mining or Food? 74 For them, the B'laan are simply Indigenous peoples. They write, "[t]here are 33,000 people in the municipality of Tampakan, including the La Bugal B'laan Indigenous Peoples who used to be hunter-gatherers and fishers". 75 They argue that if Indigenous peoples' rights had been respected, a sustainable approach to food security would have been followed. To support their argument, they cite Stavenhagen's reports, the IPRA and UNDRIP. 76 It was an example of how human rights advocates use internation legal discourse to promote national security and development.
A sustainable development approach is, in my view, far preferable to capitalist resource extraction. But it is a normative claim about the way law, institutions, or human rights should work. It invests in the excess of human rights to reinvest in the state system as though the state is a neutral, passive, and empty vessel to reconstruct for promoting  73 Ibid. 74 Goodland and Wicks, supra note 54. 75 Ibid., at 107. 76 Ibid., at xviii.
Western liberal democratic values, as well as their violent institutions. That is to say, Goodland and Wicks' suggestion is consistent with Mutua's critique. There are two other issues. International human rights law was not the only form of opposition or resistance to the Tampakan mine, nor was it the other international law that could be invoked. As resistance to the mine continued, those who supported its development could draw on the international law on terrorism and counterterrorism. That is where we begin to see a clash and then a synthesis of international legal discourses. In 2008, the NPA attacked the Tampakan mine's base camp. 77 In response, SMI hired a private security firm and partnered with local governments and police to create a task force. 78 The Philippine Department of National Defense considered deploying soldiers to "foreign-backed mining projects for protection from communist attacks". 79 Investors and rights advocates both warned against increasing militarization. The investors urged the government to maintain "peace and order". 80 Eliezer Billanes, a human rights and anti-mining advocate, warned that militarization would increase the "displacement of indigenous peoples and more human rights violations". 81 Unfortunately, Billanes was murdered. As a "man of unity" and a "vocal critic of the multinational mining company" 82 who opposed "development aggression", 83 the Alliance for Genuine Development explained that the National Security Council and military forces "tried to harass" him, bribe him, and eventually killed him to "'finish off' the insurgency in [this] area". 84 They called it a "chilling warning to all those who are involved in the opposition to mining" because it was an "extra-judicial killing promoted by high-ranking agents of the government" to "horrify the mass activists and environmentalists". 85 Those are accusations that government agents had failed to employ legitimate state-sanctioned means of national security. Today, we might retrospectively construe those claims as allegations as a type of "state terrorism". 86 Resistance to the mine could be viewed as a contest over who had the authority to control that territory. Those who use international legal discourse on human rights assert that Indigenous peoples have that legitimate authority. As a discourse involving international law, it reinvests in the legitimacy of the state as the authority and guarantor of rights. When states have already delineated and upheld their processes of contestation 77 Bong S. SARMIENTO, "Critics Nix Deployment of Soldiers in Mining Site", Inside Mindanao (19 October 2008) (on file with author). 78 KITACO was named for the local government units of Kiblawan, Tampakan, and Columbio. 79 Sarmiento, supra note 77. 80 Goodland and Wicks, supra note 54 at 120; Sarmiento, supra note 77. 81 Sarmiento, supra note 77. as legitimate, human rights organizations can argue that state agents are acting beyond those boundaries, decry that violence, and advocate for a return to some boundaries. It upholds human rights as non-violent, but preserves legalized forms of institutionalized violence in ways that advocates hope will work better for Indigenous peoples. One nongovernmental organization (NGO) submitted a call for evidence of human rights abuses to the United Kingdom's Joint Committee on Human Rights. 87 Another NGO made a shadow submission to the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD), which described human rights abuses and argued that the law had "evolved into a highly discriminatory set of rules … which are not in conformity with the customs, laws and traditional practices of indigenous communities". 88 CERD responded by criticizing extrajudicial "executions", "disappearances and detention", and internal displacement due to armed conflict. It noted that the application of the Regalian doctrine and the Mining Act were contrary to the IPRA and other Indigenous human rights. 89 This shows how human rights are upheld as non-violent correctives to illegitimate uses of violence, which includes previously legitimate uses of state law such as the Mining Act. In identifying the state as acting illegitimately (even if it was acting legally), they argue that the state should implement law consistently with international human rights law, which upholds human rights as something exceeding what liberal-democratic states have already created through law. It retains and reinvests in state-based national security, which is a form of institutionalized violence. It identifies some forms of state-sanctioned actions as violent and decries that violence as illegitimate. Even if it is attempting to change institutional manifestations of violence, it misrecognizes that discourse on human rights will clash and synthesize with pre-existing state interests. If they are successful in persuading state actors to adopt that discourse, powerful state institutions will be able to successfully (but temporarily) capture the excess values of that discourse in violent institutions that remake the state. It will continue to exclude the non-state, illegitimate violent Other. Amidst these discourses, Daguil Capion emerged alongside more violence.
In 2009, local media interviewed B'laan leader, Pilo Capion, who had previously worked for and supported the mine. 90 It also reported that he changed his mind when roads were constructed without "prior consent". 91 Pilo's brother, Daguil, 92 and his grandfather said they consented because they were "promised the heavens … But … they were not told about the project's ill effects." 93 In 2011, four SMI employees were murdered, 94 and in 2012, Daguil Capion claimed responsibility for murdering two SMI security guards. 95 94 Edwin ESPEJO, "Tampakan Mine Operator Seeks Tighter Security Due to Attacks" Rappler (27 July 2012), online: Rappler <https://www.rappler.com/business/industries/tampakan-mine-operator-seeks-tighter-security-due-to-attacks>. 95 Ibid.
Capion's wife, Juvy, and their two children. 96 The Brigade claimed it was pursuing Capion. 97 Witnesses claimed that he was not there and that Juvy and her children were unarmed. 98 The violence escalated. In 2013, government forces killed Capion's brother, Kitari, and claimed that Capion's group had fired upon them. 99 Those forces killed two more B'laan members, 100 which they attempted to justify as an act done while in pursuit of Capion. 101 Media outlets reported that Capion had joined the CPP-NPA. 102 When this was reported, various actors could identify him, according to their discourses to support their visions for the state.
III. Identifying a Subject as an Object for discourse As Capion was identified through media reports, he was constructed as a subject and object of different international laws. One discourse identifies him as a threat to peace and as a terrorist for aligning with the NPA. The Other identifies him as a defender of Indigenous peoples' rights and struggles to explain his violence or association with the NPA. This section explores how Capion was identified according to these different discourses, which ended up synthesized within state-sanctioned discourse. One discourse identified him as a violent bandit, which aligns with a discourse on terrorism. Those who disparage Daguil Capion's violence view him as a criminal. This discourse previews how state actors and supporters would later use a discourse on terrorism against Capion, B'laan, or other Indigenous peoples. Local media reported that the Kiblawan Mayor, Marivic Diamante, called Capion a "bandit" and offered a reward for his capture, "which translates into a shoot-to-kill order". 103 It was also reported that the "military … said Capion was a bandit who resorted to armed robbery after he was denied work in the company". 104 Whether the specific allegations are true is less relevant than the attempts to identify him as a "bandit" or a "fugitive". 105 They attempt to identify him as an illegitimate, violent Other, who cannot be tolerated in a secure and peaceful democratic state. Although they advocate for peace and order, they misrecognize that advocacy helps justify the state's violence or terrorism against Indigenous peoples, Lumads, and the B'laan.
The second international legal discourse involves the human rights of Indigenous peoples. Commentators who use this discourse identify Daguil Capion as a traditional B'laan elder and leader. They emphasize his role in the B'laan community or Capion family rather than the individual to identify him as a representative of Indigenous peoples. For instance, Raymund Villanueva wrote: [f]or a fulong, a well-respected B'laan clan elder, however, Daguil is not a bandit … The Capions initially supported SMI-Xtrata, including Daguil, who was employed by the mining company as a community relations staff for three years starting in 2005 … [but] [t]he clan had a falling-out with the company when it ordered the Capions to leave their land, which SMI-Xstrata wanted to buy … [T]he Capions said they are just following and enforcing their customary laws against violators of their ancestral domain. 'When it comes to our land, our laws, and not of outsiders, apply,' the fulong said. 106 Villanueva de-emphasizes the individual to emphasize traditional laws and identities. On this account, "Daguil" is replaced with a collective or traditional status of "fulong" so that he is a legitimate defender of his traditional territory, a pangayo. 107 Identifying Capion in this way is not wrong. However, when the international legal discourse on human rights is upheld as non-violent correctives to illegitimate uses of violence, it becomes difficult to explain Capion's violence and association with the NPA. For example, a human rights impact assessment of the Tampakan mine explains that the NPA "capitaliz[ed] on the resentment felt primarily by indigenous community members towards SMI to recruit new members". 108 They expressed concerns that the Philippines' "military has often legitimized its operations by tagging Indigenous communities as supporters of the NPA". 109 They also acknowledged that "the NPA and some indigenous community members are contributing to an increase in violence". 110 They correctly placed the responsibilities and burden on the state, but they treated the NPA as distinct from "indigenous community members". In a footnote they write: It has to be noted that the indigenous community members on Mindanao who resort to violence are at times members of the NPA. At the same time, they are often labelled as insurgents of the NPA even if they act independently. It is not always possible to clearly establish affiliation from the outside. 111 This discourse seeks to uphold the NPA as violent "insurgents" instead of as terrorists, and Indigenous peoples as aligned with human rights. It is not clear from the outside (or perhaps from any "inside") who is affiliated with what political movement, or whether labels are correctly applied, because acts of recognition and designation are partial and particular. Individuals and communities can claim identities, but others remain involved in their construction, identification, and contestation through discourse.
One effect of identifying Capion and others as Indigenous peoples for human rights purposes is that subjecting them to discourse also makes them an object. It can undercut their agency, even if the intention is to support their agency. Identifying them as a subject produces them as victims for inclusion within the legitimate authority of state-sanctioned 106 Villanueva, supra note 103. 107 Sarmiento, supra note 100; Edwin ESPEJO, "Survivors of Capion Killings 'Hijacked'" Rappler (22 October 2012), online: Rappler <http://www.rappler.com/nation/14663-survivors-of-capion-killings-hijacked>. 108 Human Rights Impact Assessment, supra note 33 at 29. 109 Ibid., at 15 (citing Summary prepared by the Office of the High Commission for Human Rights in accordance with paragraph 5 of the Annex to Human Rights Council resolution 16/21, Human Rights Council, UN Doc. A/HRC/WG.6/13/ PHL/3, (2012) at para. 120. 110 Ibid., at xvii, 54, 55. 111 Ibid., at 54, fn. 47.
discourse. This was seen when Stavenhagen noted that Indigenous peoples' "leaders were tricked by the authorities into signing agreements". 112 As mentioned above, the form of this narrative 113 constructs Indigenous peoples as victims who must be protected from the savages, the "bad" state cultures who have illegally and wrongly implemented the law. Then human rights defenders and NGOs help states protect victims through the implementation of the rule of law and democratic institution building, which only occurs through respecting and protecting human rights. Admittedly, Capion and other B'laan might be victims of state violence or terror, 114 but it is not clear that Capion invoked international human rights law or sought assistance from human rights advocates or defenders. Instead, defenders of human rights used international legal discourse to identify him and other B'laan as Indigenous peoples so human rights either should have worked or will work better next time.
As an example, First Peoples Worldwide wrote: [a]fter learning about potential benefits and downsides to the mine, community members were initially split in their opinions; however, as the violent encounters between community members and the company have continued, more and more B'laan villagers now oppose the mine. Proper consultation and negotiations on the behalf of Glencore-Xstrata could have prevented numerous deaths, injuries, protests, and project delays. 115 In this discourse, the law's "implementation leaves much to be desired". 116 On this view, "proper" consultation and negotiation would have worked better, and it leaves unaddressed any problems with the construction of ICCs/IPs or Indigenous peoples as state subjects.
While there are significant criticisms of state law and its implementation, 117 the excesses of international human rights can always suggest that the implementation could otherwise have been better. 118 Advocating for a form of state-based national security that arises through sustainable development, or food security, or protecting Indigenous peoples' rights can be presented as a normatively preferable course of action. It probably is when the only other option is extractive capitalism. However, the discourse does not question or confront whether constructing individuals and communities as ICCs/ IPs or as Indigenous peoples and subjecting them to legal regimes they do not control (re) constitutes the problem that human rights advocates argue against. Human rights advocates recognize that implementing the law is problematic, but misrecognize that they are advocating for the (re)imposition of legality that is bound to institutionally structured violent subjection. It conforms, once again, to Mutua's savages-victims-saviours metaphor that replicates a colonial form.
More could be said about both these discourses. 119 They are not the same or equivalent, but "both discourses have mutually influenced each other while also being shaped by complex ideological investments in liberal and neoliberal discourses of democracy and security". 120 When international law becomes used within the state, it reasserts and legitimates a legal basis for the state. Additionally, each identification is partial and particular: every act of recognition is also a misrecognition. 121 International legal discourses on terrorism will emphasize illegitimate violence because terrorism is typically (but not always) aligned with killing civilians or non-combatants. 122 As such, that discourse will identify Capion as a bandit and a terrorist. It helps justify state violence in reasserting a supposedly legitimate control of its territory (and over Indigenous communities). The discourse on human rights is also selective. It decries state violence as illegitimate because it emphasizes Capion as a representative of Indigenous peoples so that the state should protect his land rights. Because it selectively emphasizes what appears prodemocratic and non-violent, it has trouble explaining Capion's use of violence while maintaining his agency. In this way, Capion becomes subject to discourse in ways that advance the identifier's legal projects for a democratic state.
As both discourses recognize/misrecognize individuals and communities to advocate for legal changes, both underestimate their relation to and uses of law as institutionally bound and, therefore, apparently legitimate the use of violence. 123 The construction of the state through colonialism and the continuous maintenance of its borders, jurisdictions, and laws are violent and exclusionary actions that (re)create the illegitimate, non-state Other. 124 In some circumstances, when the Other refuses to use the legitimized statesanctioned means of violent contestation, they risk becoming bandits, outlaws, or nonstate terrorists. 125 With a presumption of legitimacy, the state and its actors misrecognize its law as violent, and itself as monopolizing violence over a territory. 126 As much as Capion, some other B'laan, and media reporters accuse the government and the developers of perpetrating state terrorism, their challenge to the state's territorial claim also makes them terrorists (according to the state).
Similarly, those who recognize/misrecognize Capion as an Indigenous person fail to see that they are constructing him to advocate for a version of state-based national security. To their immense credit, they attempt to support Capion and people like him. They also misrecognize his violence and the NPA's more radical aims. Instead of upholding his violence as directed at anti-imperialism, anti-capitalism, and, perhaps, the neoliberaldemocratic form of the state, they identify him as an Indigenous person for international human rights law purposes. In calling out aspects of state violence, they undercut Capion's agency and his violence. If they assert that Indigenous peoples should have legitimate control of their territory, they advocate for state-sanctioned rights. Using international law as discourse reinvests in national security, development, and the state as legitimate. 127 It re-justifies state violence, albeit through legal processes for rights, which reasserts the state's supposedly legitimate control of its territory and Indigenous peoples. In failing to recognize the violence inherent in the state's legal institutions, human rights advocates cannot recognize their role in promoting the presumption of state legitimacy and the way the state is violently (re)creating an illegitimate, non-state Other.
Both discourses advocate for the maintenance of law, which cannot recognize that the law's legitimacy is maintained through continuous violent contestation and exclusion. 128 Their advocacy misidentifies their violence and that these two discourses operate as "complementary logics". 129 In this way, the discourses clash in recognizing the same individuals in different ways. When synthesized within state discourse, this discourse remakes the state as it constructs the violent, illegitimate, non-state Other.

IV. Analysing Synthesis
Capion's opposition to the Tampakan mine is only one example in the Philippines of opposition to resource extraction projects or hydropower dams. 130 As terrorist activities and Indigenous resistance to natural resources projects continued, the discourses drawing on international law continued to clash. In time, they became partially synthesized in state-sanctioned law, policy, and discourse.
In 2012 the Philippines adopted the Terrorism Financing Prevention and Suppression Act. It sought to implement the state's commitments under the International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism and "other binding terrorism related resolutions". 131 Under that Act, President Duterte designated the CPP-NPA a terrorist organization in 2017, largely due to their opposition to natural resource development projects. 132 Then, in March 2018, President Duterte identified 600 individuals as supporters of the NPA (or other terrorist organizations). These included the UN Special Rapporteur for the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, Joan Carling, a former member of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, and others. 133 An NGO explains that Tauli-Corpuz: called the allegations, 'baseless, malicious and irresponsible' … Human rights organizations have charged the Philippines army with harassing and killing the Indigenous Lumad people on Mindanao Island who have been caught in the middle of a communist insurgency. 134 It is terrifying. This phrasing also makes "Indigenous Lumad people" into victims who are "caught in the middle" between the state and communists. It appears inconceivable that any individual or community who might be identified as "Indigenous Lumad people" could be violent or choose to align with leftists, communists, or the state. 135 In doing so, it preserves the notion that human rights are peaceful and non-violent. In locating violence elsewhere, this inhibited discourse misrecognizes how it constructs the Other as the illegitimate violent actor. It is powerful, useful, and fits within state discourse. It enables Duterte and his ilk to agree that Indigenous peoples are not terrorists and continue to pursue their interests.
That occurred after President Duterte issued Executive Order 70 in December 2018 to create a "national task force to end local communist armed conflict" and promote a "whole-of-nation" approach "through intensified development and other peace-building initiatives". 136 This "whole-of-nation" approach influences attempts at erasing native identity as it echoes the 1987 Constitution's recognition and promotion of "indigenous cultural communities within the framework of national unity and development" (emphasis added). 137 As the Indigenous Working Group for Indigenous Affairs explains, the "Department of Education ordered the closure of 55 Lumad schools … [grounded] on baseless claims of the government that the … schools are teaching students to rebel". 138 The government targeted "Lumads" as "rebels", not "Indigenous peoples". In upholding a discourse on "Indigenous peoples" and denouncing the term "Lumad", the state adopted the preferred international legal discourse on Indigenous peoples' rights. As international legal discourses on terrorism and Indigenous peoples synthesized, state actors agreed that Indigenous peoples were not terrorists/communists, but targeted the same people who they (re)identified as "Lumads".
The government then passed the Anti-Terrorism Act of 2020 to replace the HSA. 139 It retained an expansive definition of terrorism, created an anti-terrorism council, allowed warrantless arrests, and removed safeguards against wrongful accusation and detention. At the UN, the Minister and Legal Adviser of the Philippine Mission, Angela Ponce, said it strictly adhered to "relevant Security Council resolutions, including Resolutions 1373 and 2178, and to the UN Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy". 140 Amnesty International historically responsible for much of the injustices and inequities suffered by indigenous peoples-but to the indigenous peoples themselves. Indigenous peoples have the right to self-ascription, which is itself rooted in their fundamental right to self-determination. They have the right to determine, among other things, their own name or names. 148 (Emphasis added.) Indigenous peoples have the right to self-ascription and self-determination, and it is incumbent upon the state and the NCIP to protect and respect those rights. Even though it is obvious that Gatmaytan is writing about "Lumads", the subjects that have selfdetermination are Indigenous peoples. It is not his intention, but Gatmaytan's discourse reaffirms the state's claim that Lumads must identify as Indigenous peoples to have the protections of the state and the right to argue against the state's policies or laws. 149 He argues against how the state implemented these laws with a discourse that supports the NCIP's claim that the primary means of legal protection is predicated on identification as "Indigenous peoples". Even if he is arguing that Indigenous peoples have rights to self-determination, this discourse within the state calls forth state powers to protect, define, and delineate that right, among other rights. Gatmaytan uses human rights to further state-sanctioned manners of contestation and constructs individuals, like Capion, as representatives of Indigenous peoples which undercut their affiliation with the NPA.
Gatmaytan is trying to support Lumads and Indigenous peoples however they choose to identify. Even if he is clear about that and places the blame on the state and state actors, the state and state actors can use his discourse to support their interests. It may further the erasure or criminalization of Lumads, but not Indigenous peoples. Gatmaytan uses international legal discourse in state-sanctioned terminology because, not only is it internationally accepted, it is safer. If Gatmaytan fails to advocate in a statesanctioned manner or challenges the state in non-state sanctioned way, then he can become identifiable as a terrorist, a non-democratic actor, and an illegitimate violent nonstate Other.

V. Final Remarks -A Way Out or Plastic Identities?
Where does this leave us? Which way do we turn? How can international law help? One way of attempting to dispense with this clash is to point out that the Philippines' approach to defining terrorist activity is too broad. To support such a view, the 1987 UN General Assembly Resolution 42/159 differentiates terrorists from those "peoples under colonial and racist regimes and other forms of alien domination and uphold[s] the legitimacy of their struggle". 150 It recognizes "the inalienable right to self-determination", and it is now clear that Indigenous peoples have a right to (internal) self-determination. 151 The state's promotion of natural resource exploitation on B'laan ancestral lands, along with its criminalization of "Lumads", demonstrate present-day coloniality. However, that return to international lawwithin a law review articleproduces a normative argument about what the state should do. 152 It is my view that the state should adhere to that resolution. But that argument does not address the context of Resolution 42/159, which has always faced practical problems. 153 Also, the subsequent "War on Terror" has made it more acceptable, but not beyond controversy, that any perceived threat to national interests is potentially identifiable as "terrorism". It is also less clear whether Resolution 42/ 159 protects individuals or communitieseven if they assert or claim rights of self-determinationif they are violent and resist state-sanctioned processes for claiming rights or adjudication.
Instead of suggesting a normative or political argument, it is worth noting that identity and subject formation, like rights, are mutable and plastic. The excesses can lead to new formations and alliances. Attending to violence within state legalities and the ways that international law influences discourse in constructing that violence also suggests the possibility of delinking subject formation from those institutions. Within neoliberal states that prioritize counterterrorism and natural resource exploitation, powerful institutions will be able to successfully (if temporarily) capture the excesses or surplus values in violent ways that remake the state. Those constructions and captures are never total. Support for Indigenous resistance is crucial in defending against exploitative regimes, but it is not enough to assert that the state should adopt Indigenous peoples' rights. Many human rights advocates are pursuing social, economic, and racial justice for minoritized groups. Furthermore, rights-based discourse can be problematic. Where a state, such as the Philippines, has recognized rights and legitimates violence through its legal institutions, any non-state sanctioned use of violence can be identified as an illegitimate use. When the state identifies and targets illegitimate uses of violence, it provides state actors with an opportunity to reassert state claims to legitimate violence. There are alternative forms of allied action. However, if we are inhibited from seeing the violence in these systems, it is uncertain we can see those alternatives or the plasticity of identity to make them legitimate.
Those who resist state-sanctioned natural resource projects, such as Daguil Capion, might be identifiable according to discourses in international law. They can align with the military branches of the communist party, human rights NGOs, environmental organizations, or others. They might use whatever platform or discourse is available to express their agency and opposition. They might not assert human rights. How individuals and communities are identified is not, however, of their own construction. While Capion might be a terrorist and be a representative of Indigenous peoples, the acts of identification nevertheless subject him to discourses.
Within state discourse, international law clashes and synthesizes. The Philippines is unique, but it is not the only place where these international legal discourses are overlapping. The United States of America, Canada, and Brazil have all adopted counterterrorism strategies that target "eco-extremists" alongside Indigenous peoples. 154 While international legal discourse on human rights is a powerful tool for advocacy, it can clash with other international legal discourses that, when combined in the state, remove, negate, and undermine more radical challenges and forms of alliance. While international human rights law retains the possibilities of radical, egalitarian futurity, 155 advocacy for state reform occurs through violent contests that remake the borders of legitimate contestation as it externalizes its violence.