In June of 2021, the federal government passed legislation that affirmed the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) and began the process of formalizing its provisions in Canadian law. Among other things, UNDRIP states that Indigenous peoples have rights of self-government and rights of ownership, use, and development of traditionally-held lands and resources
While the vast majority of forestlands in Canada are considered ‘Crown land’, there are key areas of...
This paper offers a sociological interpretation of the Canadian Comprehensive Land Claims (CLC) proc...
In Canada, Indigenous activists and scholars critique municipalization as a threefold process that s...
As many Indigenous communities return to self-governance and self-determination, they are taking the...
THE PUBLICATION OF DOCTOR KINNARI I. Bhatt’s first book, Concessionaires, Financiers and Communities...
Since 2006, successive Canadian governments have worked to create private property regimes on lands ...
While colonial imposition of the Canadian legal order has undermined Indigenous law, creating gaps a...
While colonial imposition of the Canadian legal order has undermined Indigenous law, creating gaps a...
Aboriginal rights, including Aboriginal title to land, are communal rights that are vested in Indige...
This article uses James (Sákéj) Youngblood Henderson’s process to achieving a postcolonial legal con...
Human rights law has begun to offer normative protection for what remains of indigenous lands. Yet t...
Not until the 1990s did the highest courts in Australia and Canada begin to address the colonial rea...
This chapter examines the land rights of Indigenous peoples in the United States, Canada, Australia ...
This article explores the relationship between Aboriginal title and private property. In the case of...
Indigenous relations with land are grounded in place-based legal orders which have been regulating t...
While the vast majority of forestlands in Canada are considered ‘Crown land’, there are key areas of...
This paper offers a sociological interpretation of the Canadian Comprehensive Land Claims (CLC) proc...
In Canada, Indigenous activists and scholars critique municipalization as a threefold process that s...
As many Indigenous communities return to self-governance and self-determination, they are taking the...
THE PUBLICATION OF DOCTOR KINNARI I. Bhatt’s first book, Concessionaires, Financiers and Communities...
Since 2006, successive Canadian governments have worked to create private property regimes on lands ...
While colonial imposition of the Canadian legal order has undermined Indigenous law, creating gaps a...
While colonial imposition of the Canadian legal order has undermined Indigenous law, creating gaps a...
Aboriginal rights, including Aboriginal title to land, are communal rights that are vested in Indige...
This article uses James (Sákéj) Youngblood Henderson’s process to achieving a postcolonial legal con...
Human rights law has begun to offer normative protection for what remains of indigenous lands. Yet t...
Not until the 1990s did the highest courts in Australia and Canada begin to address the colonial rea...
This chapter examines the land rights of Indigenous peoples in the United States, Canada, Australia ...
This article explores the relationship between Aboriginal title and private property. In the case of...
Indigenous relations with land are grounded in place-based legal orders which have been regulating t...
While the vast majority of forestlands in Canada are considered ‘Crown land’, there are key areas of...
This paper offers a sociological interpretation of the Canadian Comprehensive Land Claims (CLC) proc...
In Canada, Indigenous activists and scholars critique municipalization as a threefold process that s...