Simply put, Crown liability doctrine in Crown/Aboriginal Law in Canada is a mess. Demonstrably, there are fiduciary-based duties, fiduciary-based principles, an over-arching honour of the Crown principle, Crown honour-based duties, and a constitutional Crown/Aboriginal “reconciliation” imperative. How the various pieces are meant to fit together is atypically unclear. In this project, Ronald Dworkin’s rights thesis is invoked as a conceptual tool in an attempt to help bring some order to the disarray. It is argued that the Supreme Court of Canada made a fundamental (Dworkinian) mistake in the manner in which they adopted fiduciary concepts into the core of Crown/Aboriginal Law; that this mistake has led to a dysfunctional doctrine; and th...
In Manitoba Metis Federation, the Supreme Court of Canada makes a valuable contribution to our under...
Abstract: Aboriginal rights as inherent rights deriving from Aboriginal peoples ’ historical occupat...
This thesis explores the appropriate legal principles that should inform monetary compensation for i...
Simply put, Crown liability doctrine in Crown/Aboriginal Law in Canada is a mess. Demonstrably, ther...
The honour of the Crown is recognized as a Canadian constitutional principle that is essential to re...
This article confronts the contention that the Crown’s fiduciary obligations are incompatible with A...
This article considers the Supreme Court’s two Aboriginal law decisions of 2018. They are not ground...
The existing “rights” paradigm in Aboriginal law accepts Crown sovereignty claims grounded in ethnoc...
This thesis is about two inter-related matters: first, the allocation of burdens of proof in litigat...
The Canadian Crown\u27s fiduciary duty to First Nations is entrenched in Canadian Aboriginal rights ...
The honour of the Crown in Canadian Aboriginal jurisprudence has taken on a prominent role in interp...
As a result of the Supreme Court of Canada\u27s decision in R. v. Sparrow, the government\u27s fiduc...
This article examines the application of the theory of the unity of the Crown in Canada in the conte...
This thesis examines the relationship between the provincial Crown and Aboriginal peoples in the par...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation constructs an alternative framework for t...
In Manitoba Metis Federation, the Supreme Court of Canada makes a valuable contribution to our under...
Abstract: Aboriginal rights as inherent rights deriving from Aboriginal peoples ’ historical occupat...
This thesis explores the appropriate legal principles that should inform monetary compensation for i...
Simply put, Crown liability doctrine in Crown/Aboriginal Law in Canada is a mess. Demonstrably, ther...
The honour of the Crown is recognized as a Canadian constitutional principle that is essential to re...
This article confronts the contention that the Crown’s fiduciary obligations are incompatible with A...
This article considers the Supreme Court’s two Aboriginal law decisions of 2018. They are not ground...
The existing “rights” paradigm in Aboriginal law accepts Crown sovereignty claims grounded in ethnoc...
This thesis is about two inter-related matters: first, the allocation of burdens of proof in litigat...
The Canadian Crown\u27s fiduciary duty to First Nations is entrenched in Canadian Aboriginal rights ...
The honour of the Crown in Canadian Aboriginal jurisprudence has taken on a prominent role in interp...
As a result of the Supreme Court of Canada\u27s decision in R. v. Sparrow, the government\u27s fiduc...
This article examines the application of the theory of the unity of the Crown in Canada in the conte...
This thesis examines the relationship between the provincial Crown and Aboriginal peoples in the par...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation constructs an alternative framework for t...
In Manitoba Metis Federation, the Supreme Court of Canada makes a valuable contribution to our under...
Abstract: Aboriginal rights as inherent rights deriving from Aboriginal peoples ’ historical occupat...
This thesis explores the appropriate legal principles that should inform monetary compensation for i...