In its foundational case law, the Supreme Court of Canada linked the duty to consult and accommodate to the purpose of reconciliation. However, the Canadian legal rules on the duty to consult, as presently structured and developed by case law, do not adequately fulfill that purpose. The Court has also consistently stated that the duty to consult and accommodate does not include an obligation to reach an agreement. This judicial pronouncement appears to provide the government an opportunity to approach consultation processes in a manner that merely seeks to reach the minimal requirements, without requiring an effective and meaningful dialogue. A minimum-requirement approach to consultation and accommodation would leave the protective and rec...
Duty to consult and accommodate jurisprudence does not live up to the promise of reconciliation that...
This article considers the limitations in Canada’s duty to consult with Aboriginal peoples as recent...
Can municipalities infringe Aboriginal or treaty rights without consulting the affected Indigenous g...
In its foundational case law, the Supreme Court of Canada linked the duty to consult and accommodate...
Canada’s legal system has repeatedly ruled that the Crown has a duty to consult with Indigenous Peop...
The federal and provincial governments have a duty to consult Aboriginal people when they propose to...
The Supreme Court of Canada has continuously held that the underlying purpose of section 35(1) of th...
The judiciary has repeatedly called on First Nations and the Crown not to tax the institutional comp...
In 2017, the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) decided two duty to consult cases, heard together: Clyde ...
On November 18, 2004 the Supreme Court of Canada ( the Court ) released its two landmark decisions o...
This thesis aims to address uncertainty within the legal regulatory environment of the duty to consu...
In Mikisew Cree II, a large majority of the Supreme Court of Canada took the view that the Constitut...
This article analyses the apparent tensions between the current Canadian law on the Crown's duty to ...
The duty to consult is an Aboriginal right under s. 35 of Canada’s Constitution Act, 1982. Under the...
The members of Mikisew Cree First Nation are descended from signatories of Treaty 8. Their tr...
Duty to consult and accommodate jurisprudence does not live up to the promise of reconciliation that...
This article considers the limitations in Canada’s duty to consult with Aboriginal peoples as recent...
Can municipalities infringe Aboriginal or treaty rights without consulting the affected Indigenous g...
In its foundational case law, the Supreme Court of Canada linked the duty to consult and accommodate...
Canada’s legal system has repeatedly ruled that the Crown has a duty to consult with Indigenous Peop...
The federal and provincial governments have a duty to consult Aboriginal people when they propose to...
The Supreme Court of Canada has continuously held that the underlying purpose of section 35(1) of th...
The judiciary has repeatedly called on First Nations and the Crown not to tax the institutional comp...
In 2017, the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) decided two duty to consult cases, heard together: Clyde ...
On November 18, 2004 the Supreme Court of Canada ( the Court ) released its two landmark decisions o...
This thesis aims to address uncertainty within the legal regulatory environment of the duty to consu...
In Mikisew Cree II, a large majority of the Supreme Court of Canada took the view that the Constitut...
This article analyses the apparent tensions between the current Canadian law on the Crown's duty to ...
The duty to consult is an Aboriginal right under s. 35 of Canada’s Constitution Act, 1982. Under the...
The members of Mikisew Cree First Nation are descended from signatories of Treaty 8. Their tr...
Duty to consult and accommodate jurisprudence does not live up to the promise of reconciliation that...
This article considers the limitations in Canada’s duty to consult with Aboriginal peoples as recent...
Can municipalities infringe Aboriginal or treaty rights without consulting the affected Indigenous g...