This paper examines the contribution that federal legislation could make to the governance of Indigenous child welfare in Canada. It explores the origins of the assumption that indigenous child welfare must be governed by provincial legislation and explains why Parliament would have jurisdiction to legislate in this area as well. It then explores how federal legislation may contribute to indigenous self-determination, delving on examples such as the Indian Child Welfare Act in the United States and Canadian initiatives in the fields of education or child welfare. It then outlines what federal legislation should contain, in order to promote self-determination and to address the shortcomings of the current system, including those highlighted ...
This thesis sets out to examine the status of implementation of the United Nations Convention on the...
English Abstract On January 26, 2016, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal (the “Tribunal”) released a...
An Act respecting First Nations, Inuit and Métis children, youth and families (the Act) came into f...
This paper examines the contribution that federal legislation could make to the governance of Indige...
Contributions to volume 28:1 of the JLSP offered poignant insights into the root sources of the over...
The removal of children from their families and communities has long-lasting and often devastating c...
In January 2016, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal in First Nations Child and Family Caring Society...
My name is Reina Foster, an Anishinaabekwe from Lac Seul First Nation in Treaty #3. I am the former ...
As the relationships between Canada’s Aboriginal peoples and the state undergo changes, the issue of...
Indigenous children are overrepresented in child protection systems in the United States and to an e...
A series of recent legal and policy developments in Canada have potential to contribute to reconcili...
On 26 January 2016, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal released a watershed decision in First Nation...
For millennia before colonization, First Nations laws regarding children flourished across what is n...
Canadian child welfare is not one single system, but more than 13 systems overseen by provincial and...
Central to the relationship between Canada and Aboriginal children is transgression: the systematic ...
This thesis sets out to examine the status of implementation of the United Nations Convention on the...
English Abstract On January 26, 2016, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal (the “Tribunal”) released a...
An Act respecting First Nations, Inuit and Métis children, youth and families (the Act) came into f...
This paper examines the contribution that federal legislation could make to the governance of Indige...
Contributions to volume 28:1 of the JLSP offered poignant insights into the root sources of the over...
The removal of children from their families and communities has long-lasting and often devastating c...
In January 2016, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal in First Nations Child and Family Caring Society...
My name is Reina Foster, an Anishinaabekwe from Lac Seul First Nation in Treaty #3. I am the former ...
As the relationships between Canada’s Aboriginal peoples and the state undergo changes, the issue of...
Indigenous children are overrepresented in child protection systems in the United States and to an e...
A series of recent legal and policy developments in Canada have potential to contribute to reconcili...
On 26 January 2016, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal released a watershed decision in First Nation...
For millennia before colonization, First Nations laws regarding children flourished across what is n...
Canadian child welfare is not one single system, but more than 13 systems overseen by provincial and...
Central to the relationship between Canada and Aboriginal children is transgression: the systematic ...
This thesis sets out to examine the status of implementation of the United Nations Convention on the...
English Abstract On January 26, 2016, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal (the “Tribunal”) released a...
An Act respecting First Nations, Inuit and Métis children, youth and families (the Act) came into f...