Simpson examines the way in which indigeneity and sovereignty have been conflated with savagery, lawlessness, and smuggling in recent history. The national problem of indigenous smuggling is reconstructed here as it was portrayed in the public eye, largely via the media, and then through conflict-of-laws cases concerning the interpretation and application of the revenue rule. Simpson further discusses economic activities that express indigenous cultural and historical practice and that reflect a larger set of socio-economic conditions
When European nations colonized North America, their dealings with one another were based on the sta...
In Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, the Supreme Court of Canada issued its long-awaited judgment on t...
Constitutional issues related to First Nations sovereignty have dominated Aboriginal affairs in Cana...
Uncorrected proof. Supplemental material: http://culanth.org/?q=node/310This essay examines a double...
This article introduces a symposium issue on Law, Sovereignty, and Tribal Governance: The Iroquois ...
First Nations self-government in Canada has often been regarded as extinguished or delegated from th...
Peter Russell, a prominent Canadian political scientist, tells of the time he met with Dene leaders ...
Settler-colonialism can consist of a struggle over the pre-political ‘structure of governance’ – ove...
The U.S. Constitution grants the federal government plenary power over American Indian affairs, yet ...
It was the realization that certain legal, economic and political questions, unresolved, frustrate, ...
Indigenous peoples would strongly deny the Crown ever possessed the power to extinguish their politi...
The Santa Clara Journal of International Law brought together a panel of experts to explore issues o...
The objective of this conceptual article is to make the case that Indigenous Cemanáhuacan nations' s...
Despite claims towards a process of reconciliation with Indigenous peoples, the Canadian state has m...
In this article we reject the premise that race is merely an independent variable when studying the ...
When European nations colonized North America, their dealings with one another were based on the sta...
In Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, the Supreme Court of Canada issued its long-awaited judgment on t...
Constitutional issues related to First Nations sovereignty have dominated Aboriginal affairs in Cana...
Uncorrected proof. Supplemental material: http://culanth.org/?q=node/310This essay examines a double...
This article introduces a symposium issue on Law, Sovereignty, and Tribal Governance: The Iroquois ...
First Nations self-government in Canada has often been regarded as extinguished or delegated from th...
Peter Russell, a prominent Canadian political scientist, tells of the time he met with Dene leaders ...
Settler-colonialism can consist of a struggle over the pre-political ‘structure of governance’ – ove...
The U.S. Constitution grants the federal government plenary power over American Indian affairs, yet ...
It was the realization that certain legal, economic and political questions, unresolved, frustrate, ...
Indigenous peoples would strongly deny the Crown ever possessed the power to extinguish their politi...
The Santa Clara Journal of International Law brought together a panel of experts to explore issues o...
The objective of this conceptual article is to make the case that Indigenous Cemanáhuacan nations' s...
Despite claims towards a process of reconciliation with Indigenous peoples, the Canadian state has m...
In this article we reject the premise that race is merely an independent variable when studying the ...
When European nations colonized North America, their dealings with one another were based on the sta...
In Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, the Supreme Court of Canada issued its long-awaited judgment on t...
Constitutional issues related to First Nations sovereignty have dominated Aboriginal affairs in Cana...