This paper works from the assumption that the power of the state to determine and regulate debate around the reinvigoration of Indigenous legal traditions must be set aside, and that the path forward must be laid out by Indigenous peoples. Working out the implications of this assumption leads to ruminations on the roles that identity, colonialism, culture and self- determination must play in structuring debate around the rebuilding of these legal traditions. The position that begins to emerge from these ruminations focuses attention on the need to control processes of identity formation. Given the historical and ongoing impacts of colonial policies and practices, regaining and exercising control over these processes will be challenging in i...
Canada is a juridically pluralistic state, and draws on many sources of law to sustain order through...
This article uses James (Sákéj) Youngblood Henderson’s process to achieving a postcolonial legal con...
Disputes over land are the major source of conflict between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal peoples ar...
This paper works from the assumption that the power of the state to determine and regulate debate ar...
This thesis traces tensions between pluralism, elimination and resistance in the centuries-old narra...
Beginning with the understanding that knowledge is empowering (rather than power), the initial chapt...
When an Aboriginal right is asserted, questions arise about the nature of the “proper” rights-holder...
This is a study of whether, in the introduction of Indigenous oral traditions as evidence in court, ...
This paper, presented at the 2003 Native Title Conference in Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Aust...
This dissertation proposes re-asserting Indigenous legal authority over immigration in the face of s...
This paper discusses the impact of state engagement with Indigenous legal orders through transitiona...
A critical appraisal of the politics of legal recognition in relation to aboriginal rights
Throughout Canada\u27s long colonial relationship with Aboriginal nations, the Crown and the judicia...
First Nations self-government in Canada has often been regarded as extinguished or delegated from th...
The relationship between the common law of Canada and Australia and Indigenous peoples has been one ...
Canada is a juridically pluralistic state, and draws on many sources of law to sustain order through...
This article uses James (Sákéj) Youngblood Henderson’s process to achieving a postcolonial legal con...
Disputes over land are the major source of conflict between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal peoples ar...
This paper works from the assumption that the power of the state to determine and regulate debate ar...
This thesis traces tensions between pluralism, elimination and resistance in the centuries-old narra...
Beginning with the understanding that knowledge is empowering (rather than power), the initial chapt...
When an Aboriginal right is asserted, questions arise about the nature of the “proper” rights-holder...
This is a study of whether, in the introduction of Indigenous oral traditions as evidence in court, ...
This paper, presented at the 2003 Native Title Conference in Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Aust...
This dissertation proposes re-asserting Indigenous legal authority over immigration in the face of s...
This paper discusses the impact of state engagement with Indigenous legal orders through transitiona...
A critical appraisal of the politics of legal recognition in relation to aboriginal rights
Throughout Canada\u27s long colonial relationship with Aboriginal nations, the Crown and the judicia...
First Nations self-government in Canada has often been regarded as extinguished or delegated from th...
The relationship between the common law of Canada and Australia and Indigenous peoples has been one ...
Canada is a juridically pluralistic state, and draws on many sources of law to sustain order through...
This article uses James (Sákéj) Youngblood Henderson’s process to achieving a postcolonial legal con...
Disputes over land are the major source of conflict between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal peoples ar...