Since 2006, successive Canadian governments have worked to create private property regimes on lands reserved for First Nations. This article examines how the state framed the theory and history of Aboriginal property rights to achieve this goal. It then shows how, under the pretense of restoration, bureaucrats developed legislation that would create novel political spaces where, once converted to private property, reserved lands would function as a new kind of federal municipality in Canada. These changes took place in two ways: First, bureaucrats situated Aboriginal property within the state apparatus and reconfigured Indigenous territorial rights into a series of “regulatory gaps” regarding voting thresholds, certainty of title, and the h...
Settler-colonialism can consist of a struggle over the pre-political ‘structure of governance’ – ove...
This study focuses upon contact between British-Canadian, Aboriginal and Mennonite colonists' syste...
This article asks how the dialogue surrounding greater municipal autonomy intersects with Aboriginal...
In Canada, Indigenous activists and scholars critique municipalization as a threefold process that s...
This article explores the political, economic, and social effects of Specific Land Claims on Indigen...
This article explores the relationship between Aboriginal title and private property. In the case of...
In June of 2021, the federal government passed legislation that affirmed the United Nations Declarat...
The province of Ontario has the largest Indigenous population in Canada, and a complicated history o...
Property rights, wrote Morris Cohen in 1927, are delegations of sovereign power. They are created by...
This paper examines the relationship between the Government of Canada and First Nations during and a...
My concern within this thesis is the ongoing debate regarding the relationship of First Nations comm...
This article uses a decolonial framework to reveal the power of legality in the settler-colonial sta...
This study offers a critique of the First Nations Property Ownership Act (FNPOA), a contemporary pro...
Indigenous relations with land are grounded in place-based legal orders which have been regulating t...
This paper contends that Pierre Trudeau’s 1969 “White Paper” on the status of Aboriginals in Canada ...
Settler-colonialism can consist of a struggle over the pre-political ‘structure of governance’ – ove...
This study focuses upon contact between British-Canadian, Aboriginal and Mennonite colonists' syste...
This article asks how the dialogue surrounding greater municipal autonomy intersects with Aboriginal...
In Canada, Indigenous activists and scholars critique municipalization as a threefold process that s...
This article explores the political, economic, and social effects of Specific Land Claims on Indigen...
This article explores the relationship between Aboriginal title and private property. In the case of...
In June of 2021, the federal government passed legislation that affirmed the United Nations Declarat...
The province of Ontario has the largest Indigenous population in Canada, and a complicated history o...
Property rights, wrote Morris Cohen in 1927, are delegations of sovereign power. They are created by...
This paper examines the relationship between the Government of Canada and First Nations during and a...
My concern within this thesis is the ongoing debate regarding the relationship of First Nations comm...
This article uses a decolonial framework to reveal the power of legality in the settler-colonial sta...
This study offers a critique of the First Nations Property Ownership Act (FNPOA), a contemporary pro...
Indigenous relations with land are grounded in place-based legal orders which have been regulating t...
This paper contends that Pierre Trudeau’s 1969 “White Paper” on the status of Aboriginals in Canada ...
Settler-colonialism can consist of a struggle over the pre-political ‘structure of governance’ – ove...
This study focuses upon contact between British-Canadian, Aboriginal and Mennonite colonists' syste...
This article asks how the dialogue surrounding greater municipal autonomy intersects with Aboriginal...