1 Guam Code Ann. § 2101
COL12302011
1 Guam Code Ann. GENERAL PROVISIONS
CH. 21 COMMISSION ON DECOLONIZATION FOR THE IMPLEMENTATION AND EXERCISE OF CHAMORRO SELF DETERMINATION
native inhabitants of Guam shall be protected and that their collective right to political self-determination is inalienable.
I Liheslaturan Guåhan further finds that the United States as the administering power, in the Charter of the United Nations, designated the territory of Guam as a ‘Non-Self Governing Territory.’ By doing so it recognized that the native inhabitants have the right to one day exercise their collective self-determination through a decolonization process, to either join the ranks of self-governing entities as an independent nation or an independent nation in free association with another nation, or become a fully integrated state within the United States of America.
Consistent with these inalienable principles, the native inhabitants or people of Guam have been recognized by the U.S. Congress in the 1950
Organic Act of Guam, specifically in 48 U.S.C. § 14211, as reenacted in 8
U.S.C.§ 1407. Guam’s right to self-determination is further founded in the United States’ yearly reports to the United Nations on the Non-self Govern- ing Territory of Guam; 1950 Organic Act of Guam; United Nations Resolution Number 1541 (XV) United Nations Resolution 1514 (XV); § 307 (a) of the United States Immigration and Nationality Act; and Part I, Article 1, Paragraphs 1 and 3 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
It is the intention of I Liheslaturan Guåhan that three (3) political options be presented to the Native Inhabitants of Guam to ascertain their future political relationship with the United States of America, namely, Independence, Free Association or Statehood.
SOURCE: Repealed/reenacted by P.L. 25-106:6.