At both the international and local levels, indigenous women’s rights remain a complex and often overlooked topic. Because of their intersecting identities, which make them more susceptible than other groups in society, indigenous women are unequally victimized by violence and discrimination. Poverty, historical isolation, and prejudice have contributed to Indigenous women becoming regular victims of hatred and division.
They are subjected to discrimination and the available resources are exhausted. They are primarily isolated in distinctive ancestral domains and suffer from high unemployment, low pay, and illiteracy. However, laws have been enacted to grant them the right to possess, utilize, manage, and govern the lands, localities, and assets that they have obtained. This could be whether they are received through inherited metabolic or other traditional occupancies and those they have acquired through other means.