This article explores whether there is a legal duty to consult with Indigenous groups prior to the ratification of international trade and investment agreements. It considers both the content of the duty to consult and the circumstances under which such a duty is triggered. In doing so, this paper analyzes the arguments of Hupacasth First Nation v Canada, the only case that has been brought to the courts on this issue. Although the Federal Court of Appeal dismissed the Hupacasath First Nation’s claim that the duty to consult extends to negotiations that the federal government enters into with other State governments for Foreign Investment Protection Agreements (FIPAs), the analysis was confined to the particulars of the case. It remains to ...
This article considers the limitations in Canada’s duty to consult with Aboriginal peoples as recent...
In its foundational case law, the Supreme Court of Canada linked the duty to consult and accommodate...
In 2017, the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) decided two duty to consult cases, heard together: Clyde ...
The Crown has fiduciary obligations to First Nations and must act in consequence. One of this conseq...
This article is intended as a companion piece to Øyvind Ravna’s contribution to this anniversary vol...
One aspect of the legal relationship between the Crown and Aboriginal peoples is the duty to consult...
Although the standard of consulting Indigenous peoples in decisions affecting them is well rooted in...
Indigenous peoples have long argued that states must obtain their free, prior and informed consent (...
Few areas of international law practice illustrate the tensions between business and human rights as...
The federal and provincial governments have a duty to consult Aboriginal people when they propose to...
Although the standard of consulting Indigenous peoples in decisions affecting them is well rooted in...
The members of Mikisew Cree First Nation are descended from signatories of Treaty 8. Their tr...
In Canada, the duty to consult doctrine has been articulated as a legal remedy to address the potent...
The Supreme Court’s recent decision on the reach of the federal government’s duty to consult with In...
Canada’s legal system has repeatedly ruled that the Crown has a duty to consult with Indigenous Peop...
This article considers the limitations in Canada’s duty to consult with Aboriginal peoples as recent...
In its foundational case law, the Supreme Court of Canada linked the duty to consult and accommodate...
In 2017, the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) decided two duty to consult cases, heard together: Clyde ...
The Crown has fiduciary obligations to First Nations and must act in consequence. One of this conseq...
This article is intended as a companion piece to Øyvind Ravna’s contribution to this anniversary vol...
One aspect of the legal relationship between the Crown and Aboriginal peoples is the duty to consult...
Although the standard of consulting Indigenous peoples in decisions affecting them is well rooted in...
Indigenous peoples have long argued that states must obtain their free, prior and informed consent (...
Few areas of international law practice illustrate the tensions between business and human rights as...
The federal and provincial governments have a duty to consult Aboriginal people when they propose to...
Although the standard of consulting Indigenous peoples in decisions affecting them is well rooted in...
The members of Mikisew Cree First Nation are descended from signatories of Treaty 8. Their tr...
In Canada, the duty to consult doctrine has been articulated as a legal remedy to address the potent...
The Supreme Court’s recent decision on the reach of the federal government’s duty to consult with In...
Canada’s legal system has repeatedly ruled that the Crown has a duty to consult with Indigenous Peop...
This article considers the limitations in Canada’s duty to consult with Aboriginal peoples as recent...
In its foundational case law, the Supreme Court of Canada linked the duty to consult and accommodate...
In 2017, the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) decided two duty to consult cases, heard together: Clyde ...