Aboriginal Law 2016: Year in Review
Aboriginal Rights Claims and the Making and Remaking of History
Aboriginal Rights, Title and the Duty to Consult: Summaries of Supreme Court Ruling That Have Formed Aboriginal Rights, Title and Duty to Consult
Access to Justice for Indigenous Adult Victims of Sexual Assault
Archiving Force: Ethics and Consignation
Being Métis in Canada: An Unsettled Identity
Bill S-3, An Act to amend the Indian Act (elimination of sex-based Inequities in registration)
Bill S-3: An Act to amend the Indian Act (elimination of sex-based inequities in registration)
Boil-Water Advisories and Federal (In)Action: The Politics of Potable Water in Pikangikum First Nation
The Canadian Crown's Duty to Consult Indigenous Nations' Knowledge Systems in Federal Environmental Assessments
Challenging Historical Frameworks: Aboriginal Rights, The Trickster, and Originalism
The Child and Family Services Act in Relation to Indigenous Children: Does it Measure up to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Report?
La communauté comme sujet et objet du droit: implications
pour les Métis du Canada = The Law of the Community and Community Rights: Implications for the Métis in Canada
Con(TEXT) 1: A Project Fact (A) Update for 26 April 2018
Plain language explanation of legal principles involved in analysis of R. v. Stanley, the case in which Gerald Stanley, a Saskatchewan farmer, was charged with second-degree murder in the shooting death of a 22-year-old Cree man, Colton Boushie, and was subsequently acquitted.
The Constitutional Status and Rights of the Métis People in Canada
Court of Appeal Holds Duty to Consult Does Not Apply to Statutory Interpretation
Cultural Genocide in Canada? It Did Happen Here
Daniels v Canada (Indian Affairs and Northern Development)
Daniels v. Canada: Origins, Intentions, Futures
Dealing with the “Community Conundrum”: Métis Responses to the Application of R v Powley in British Columbia—Litigation, Negotiation, and Practice
Descheneaux Information Session--PTMA Toolkit
Destabilizing the Consultation Framework in Alberta's Tar Sands
Duty to Consult Does Not Apply to All Aboriginal Concerns
Editorial: It Takes All of Us to Enforce the Law
Eighteen Years of Inmate Litigation Culminates with Some Success in the SCC's Ewert v Canada
Elders and Indigenous Healing in the Correctional Service of Canada: A Story of Relational Dissonance, Sacred Doughnuts, and Drive-Thru Expectations
The Emerging Policy Relationship Between Canada and the Métis Nation
Equal Status for Women in the Indian Act: The Indian Act and Bill S-3
Examining the Provisions of Section 87 of the Indian Act as a Means to Promote Economic Participation and Treaty Implementation
Falling through the Cracks: Canadian Indigenous Children with Disabilities
First Peoples Law: Essays on Canadian Law and Decolonization
Gladue Sentencing Principles
Guide for Lawyers Working with Indigenous Peoples
Includes brief historical overview of Indigenous peoples and cultural competency, practical tools and guidance for advocates, list of resources for specific assistance, and suggestions for further reading.
Related Material: 1st Supplement.
Indigenous Blockages and the Power to Speak the Law: From Settler Colonialism to Indigenous Resurgence
Indigenous Justice: New Tools, Approaches, and Spaces
Indigenous Linguistic Rights in the Arctic: A Human Rights Approach
Indigenous Women and Sexual Assault in Canada
Indigenous Women's Writing and the Cultural Study of Law
The Issue of Indigenous Underrepresentation in Canadian Criminal Juries
Jurisprudential Challenges
The Land Is Our History: Indigeneity, Law, and the Settler State
Lawful Subversion of the Criminal Justice Process? Judicial, Prosecutorial, and Police Discretion in Edmondson, Kindrat, and Brown
Louis Riel Trial (1885)
Website contains links to trial transcript, chronology, selected maps, biography, and letters and diary entries introduced as evidence.
Mechanisms of Indigenous Exclusion in British Columbia's Environmental Assessment Process
Meeting Halfway: Reassessing “Cognizable to the Canadian Legal and Constitutional Structure”
Métis Rights, Daniels and Reconciliation
A Métis Treaty Through the Lens of International Law
Molecular Death and Redface Reincarnation: Indigenous Appropriations in the US and Canada
Speakers discuss the issue of who and what defines Indigenous identity, settler-state's practice of imposing their definitions, the phenomenon of "playing Indian", and broader social interpretations of court decisions such as Daniels.
Duration: 1:59:35. Presentations are part of the conference "Daniels: In and Beyond the Law" held at University of Alberta, Jan. 26-27, 2017.