Recognition of the spatial aspects of Indian settlement on reserves is vital to understanding the potential for Native self-government. In particular, the number and size of reserves, as well as the remoteness, accessibility and dispersal of Native land holdings must be considered. They can impact on the viability and cost of Native courts and institutions, the solidarity of bands, and the economic livelihood of reserve residents. As Native self-government is fleshed out in constitutional reform talks and experiments in limited self-government, it is not widely known that all of the reserves in every province of Canada combined would not cover onehalf of the reservation held by Arizona\u27s Navajo Nation
Since 2006, successive Canadian governments have worked to create private property regimes on lands ...
Understanding the land tenure and management systems that exist on First Nations reserves in Canada ...
Indigenous peoples have long been excluded from the management of their homelands and the natural re...
Recognition of the spatial aspects of Indian settlement on reserves is vital to understanding the po...
Canada's reserve system lias reconfigured Aboriginal life in terms dictated by the state. This has b...
Consider the following three scenarios: First Nation is a densely populated community in the arid in...
The Indian people of Canada are her fastest growing ethnic group. They are a people in cultural tran...
Property rights, wrote Morris Cohen in 1927, are delegations of sovereign power. They are created by...
This paper reviews the literature on economic development as it relates to indigenous people in the ...
The Aboriginal peoples have been living on the land in what is now Canada and deriving their livelih...
Canada’s constitution assigns to the provinces general power to govern the lands and resources locat...
A later revision, which expands upon this paper, was presented as: Conn, Stephen. (1990). "Why Cana...
INTRODUCTION At the center of many disputes among indigenous people and nation-states is the questio...
Indigenous relations with land are grounded in place-based legal orders which have been regulating t...
The problems of American Indian poverty and reservation living conditions have inspired various expl...
Since 2006, successive Canadian governments have worked to create private property regimes on lands ...
Understanding the land tenure and management systems that exist on First Nations reserves in Canada ...
Indigenous peoples have long been excluded from the management of their homelands and the natural re...
Recognition of the spatial aspects of Indian settlement on reserves is vital to understanding the po...
Canada's reserve system lias reconfigured Aboriginal life in terms dictated by the state. This has b...
Consider the following three scenarios: First Nation is a densely populated community in the arid in...
The Indian people of Canada are her fastest growing ethnic group. They are a people in cultural tran...
Property rights, wrote Morris Cohen in 1927, are delegations of sovereign power. They are created by...
This paper reviews the literature on economic development as it relates to indigenous people in the ...
The Aboriginal peoples have been living on the land in what is now Canada and deriving their livelih...
Canada’s constitution assigns to the provinces general power to govern the lands and resources locat...
A later revision, which expands upon this paper, was presented as: Conn, Stephen. (1990). "Why Cana...
INTRODUCTION At the center of many disputes among indigenous people and nation-states is the questio...
Indigenous relations with land are grounded in place-based legal orders which have been regulating t...
The problems of American Indian poverty and reservation living conditions have inspired various expl...
Since 2006, successive Canadian governments have worked to create private property regimes on lands ...
Understanding the land tenure and management systems that exist on First Nations reserves in Canada ...
Indigenous peoples have long been excluded from the management of their homelands and the natural re...