Search
Aboriginal Consultation and Accommodation: Interim Guidelines for Federal Officials to Fulfill the Legal Duty to Consult
Aboriginal Courts in Canada
Research paper looks at federal and provincial legislation, inherent Aboriginal rights and negotiated agreements, and different Aboriginal courts in Canada.
Related Material: Fact Sheet.
Aboriginal Law 2016: Year in Review
Aboriginal Rights: in a Neoliberal World
Aboriginal Rights, Title and the Duty to Consult: Summaries of Supreme Court Ruling That Have Formed Aboriginal Rights, Title and Duty to Consult
Aboriginal Title and Rights: Foundational Principles and Recent Developments
Aboriginality, Existing Aboriginal Rights and State Accommodation in Canada
Addressing First Nations Governance Issues through Incremental Reform: Briefing Presentation - Draft
Armed with an Eagle Feather against the Parliamentary Mace: A Discussion of Discourse on Indigenous Sovereignty and Spirituality in a Settler Colonial Canada, 1990-2017
The Board Room Trumps the Courtroom: Reconciliation through Impact and Benefit Agreements
Building on Common Ground: A New Vision for Impact Assessment in Canada: The Final Report of the Expert Panel for the Review of Environmental Assessment Processes
'But How Does This Help Me?': (Re)Thinking (Re)Conciliation in Teacher Education
Challenging Historical Frameworks: Aboriginal Rights, The Trickster, and Originalism
The Charter of Whiteness: Twenty-Five Years of Maintaining Racial Injustice in the Canadian Criminal Justice System
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
Comparative Governance Structures Among Aboriginal Peoples in Canada
Discusses the self-government issues of legitimacy, power and resources, by using examples of current agreements. The article breaks the areas down in terms of: basic principles, rights through treaties, federal-provincial division of power, status of lands, legislative powers, and funding.
Related Material: Fact Sheet.
Constitutional Reconciliation of Education for Aboriginal Peoples
The Constitutional Status and Rights of the Métis People in Canada
Courts Poor Venue to Resolve Treaty Land Claims
The Crown’s Constitutional Duty to Consult and Accommodate Aboriginal and Treaty Rights
Daniels v. Canada: Origins, Intentions, Futures
A Deal's a Deal - Kelowna Accord 1 (National Chief Fontaine)
Destabilizing the Consultation Framework in Alberta's Tar Sands
“Do Not Take Them from Myself and My Children for Ever”: Aboriginal Water Rights in Treaty 7 Territories and the Duty to Consult
Duty to Consult Does Not Apply to All Aboriginal Concerns
Expanding Tribal Citizenship Using International Principles of Self Determination
First Nations Registration (Status) and Membership Research Report
Fundamentals of Aboriginal Law Certificate: Land Management Under the First Nation Land Management Act
Gendering Decolonization, Decolonizing Gender
Gendering the Duty to Consult: How Section 35 and the Duty to Consult Are Failing Aboriginal Women: Final Paper
The Generative Structure of Aboriginal Rights
Group Rights of First Nations Need Protection, too
The Hopi and the Black Mesa: An Argument for Protection of Sacred Water Sites
Human Rights Act Seen as Threat
James Miles Venne
Brief profile of James Miles Venne, Lac La Ronge Indian Band chief, who helped create Kitsaki Development Corporation, set up band control of the local education system and lobbied for Aboriginal and treaty rights to be included in the Canadian Constitution.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.26.