This is a review essay discussing two books: Discovering Indigenous Lands: The Doctrine of Discovery in the English Colonies, by Robert J Miller, Jacinta Ruru, Larissa Behrendt, and Tracey Lindberg, and Reconciling Sovereignties: Aboriginal Nations and Canada, by Felix Hoehn
St Catherine’s Milling may seem like a peculiar choice as one of the three constitutional cases that...
The Supreme Court of Canada\u27s jurisprudence on constitutionally protected Aboriginal rights filte...
In R. v. Desautel, decided 23 April 2021, a majority of the Supreme Court of Canada held, for the fi...
This is a review essay discussing two books: Discovering Indigenous Lands: The Doctrine of Discovery...
The Doctrine of Discovery provides that colonizing European nations automatically acquired certain p...
In Johnson v. McIntosh, John Marshall proclaimed that European discovery of America “gave exclusive ...
One of the more misunderstood concepts of Anglo-American law is the discovery doctrine, the principl...
Throughout Canada\u27s long colonial relationship with Aboriginal nations, the Crown and the judicia...
This article uses a decolonial framework to reveal the power of legality in the settler-colonial sta...
North America and New Zealand were colonized by England under an international legal principle that ...
It is commonly assumed that Indigenous nations had neither sovereignty in international law nor titl...
This informative collection of eight essays by different authors plus an introduction by the editor ...
In Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, the Supreme Court of Canada issued its long-awaited judgment on t...
The idea that “discovery” of unknown lands carried with it the right to assert sovereignty and claim...
This article examines how contemporary legal discourse perpetuates and reproduces colonial structure...
St Catherine’s Milling may seem like a peculiar choice as one of the three constitutional cases that...
The Supreme Court of Canada\u27s jurisprudence on constitutionally protected Aboriginal rights filte...
In R. v. Desautel, decided 23 April 2021, a majority of the Supreme Court of Canada held, for the fi...
This is a review essay discussing two books: Discovering Indigenous Lands: The Doctrine of Discovery...
The Doctrine of Discovery provides that colonizing European nations automatically acquired certain p...
In Johnson v. McIntosh, John Marshall proclaimed that European discovery of America “gave exclusive ...
One of the more misunderstood concepts of Anglo-American law is the discovery doctrine, the principl...
Throughout Canada\u27s long colonial relationship with Aboriginal nations, the Crown and the judicia...
This article uses a decolonial framework to reveal the power of legality in the settler-colonial sta...
North America and New Zealand were colonized by England under an international legal principle that ...
It is commonly assumed that Indigenous nations had neither sovereignty in international law nor titl...
This informative collection of eight essays by different authors plus an introduction by the editor ...
In Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, the Supreme Court of Canada issued its long-awaited judgment on t...
The idea that “discovery” of unknown lands carried with it the right to assert sovereignty and claim...
This article examines how contemporary legal discourse perpetuates and reproduces colonial structure...
St Catherine’s Milling may seem like a peculiar choice as one of the three constitutional cases that...
The Supreme Court of Canada\u27s jurisprudence on constitutionally protected Aboriginal rights filte...
In R. v. Desautel, decided 23 April 2021, a majority of the Supreme Court of Canada held, for the fi...