This article uses a decolonial framework to reveal the power of legality in the settler-colonial states’ legitimation of ontological occupation. Using the 1997 Delgamuukw decision and the Coastal GasLink Pipeline as central case studies, this paper reveals that the historical interrelationship between settler-colonial land ontologies and Canadian law during the process of colonisation has influenced the Canadian court system in ways that limit possibilities for decolonisation, and recognition of Indigenous sovereignty. 
Not until the 1990s did the highest courts in Australia and Canada begin to address the colonial rea...
This article reflects upon themes and foundations of the contemporary legalism attending the resolut...
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...
Throughout Canada\u27s long colonial relationship with Aboriginal nations, the Crown and the judicia...
In Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, the Supreme Court of Canada issued its long-awaited judgment on t...
This thesis traces tensions between pluralism, elimination and resistance in the centuries-old narra...
The province of Ontario has the largest Indigenous population in Canada, and a complicated history o...
This essay presents and contrasts two narratives on the past and future of the law of Aboriginal tit...
Since 2006, successive Canadian governments have worked to create private property regimes on lands ...
In this dissertation, I seek to answer: what are the limits to attempts by Indigenous peoples to ar...
This dissertation analyzes tensions between Indigenous and Canadian authority over land and governan...
This is a review essay discussing two books: Discovering Indigenous Lands: The Doctrine of Discovery...
Settler-colonialism can consist of a struggle over the pre-political ‘structure of governance’ – ove...
This article uses James (Sákéj) Youngblood Henderson’s process to achieving a postcolonial legal con...
Not until the 1990s did the highest courts in Australia and Canada begin to address the colonial rea...
This article reflects upon themes and foundations of the contemporary legalism attending the resolut...
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...
Throughout Canada\u27s long colonial relationship with Aboriginal nations, the Crown and the judicia...
In Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, the Supreme Court of Canada issued its long-awaited judgment on t...
This thesis traces tensions between pluralism, elimination and resistance in the centuries-old narra...
The province of Ontario has the largest Indigenous population in Canada, and a complicated history o...
This essay presents and contrasts two narratives on the past and future of the law of Aboriginal tit...
Since 2006, successive Canadian governments have worked to create private property regimes on lands ...
In this dissertation, I seek to answer: what are the limits to attempts by Indigenous peoples to ar...
This dissertation analyzes tensions between Indigenous and Canadian authority over land and governan...
This is a review essay discussing two books: Discovering Indigenous Lands: The Doctrine of Discovery...
Settler-colonialism can consist of a struggle over the pre-political ‘structure of governance’ – ove...
This article uses James (Sákéj) Youngblood Henderson’s process to achieving a postcolonial legal con...
Not until the 1990s did the highest courts in Australia and Canada begin to address the colonial rea...
This article reflects upon themes and foundations of the contemporary legalism attending the resolut...
This paper offers a sociological interpretation of the Canadian Comprehensive Land Claims (CLC) proc...