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Aboriginal Land Rights in Canada: A Historical Perspective on the Fiduciary Relationship
Aboriginal Peoples and Constitutional Reform
The Aboriginal Right to Cultural Property
Addendum to the Factum of the Respondent in R. v. Rope
Adequacy of Protection for the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
Archiving Force: Ethics and Consignation
Blueberry River Indian Band v. Canada (Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development), [1995] 4 S.C.R. 344
Boundaries of the Reservation: Social, Political and Geographical Considerations for Defining the Limits of the Keweenaw Bay Chippewa Reservation
Canada's Treaties with Aboriginal Peoples
The Canadian Crown's Duty to Consult Indigenous Nations' Knowledge Systems in Federal Environmental Assessments
Canadian Indian Treaties: A Bibliography
Canadian Pacific Ltd. v. Matsqui Indian Band, [1995] 1 S.C.R. 3
Commentary on the Economic History of the Treaty 8 Area
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.
Creating the Image of the Savage in Defence of the Crown: The Ethnohistorian in Court
Cultural Genocide in Canada? It Did Happen Here
Cultures in Conflict: The Problem of Discourse
Discussion on the problem of discourse in the Dunne-za/Cree trial, which pitted written documents against knowledge gained from the oral tradition of First Nations peoples.
"Diseased Trusteeship": Repairing Canada's Relationship with Indian Nations
Donald Marshall
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
The Emerging Policy Relationship Between Canada and the Métis Nation
Ethnicity, Not Culture? Obfuscating Social Science in Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Case
A Fiduciary Theory for the Review of Aboriginal Rights
First Peoples Law: Essays on Canadian Law and Decolonization
Fraser River Fisheries: Anthropology, the State and First Nations
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.
"I see what I have done": The Life and Murder Trial of Xwelas, A S'Klallam Women
Implementing Land, Resource and Environmental Regimes under the Inuivialuit Final Agreement
Indian Treaties and American Myths: Roots of Social Conflict over Treaty Rights
Indigenous Justice: New Tools, Approaches, and Spaces
The Indigenous World 2018
Introduction: Advocacy Research and Native Studies
Introduction [BC Studies, No. 95, Autumn, 1992]
Introduction: The Marriage of History and Law in R. v. Sioui
"It is a Strict Law That Bids Us Dance": Cosmologies, Colonialism, Death, and Ritual Authority in the Kwakwaka'wakw Potlatch, 1849 to 1922
The Legal and Social Alienation of Aboriginal Peoples in Canada
Louis Riel Trial (1885)
Website contains links to trial transcript, chronology, selected maps, biography, and letters and diary entries introduced as evidence.
Meeting Halfway: Reassessing “Cognizable to the Canadian Legal and Constitutional Structure”
Mitchell v. Peguis Indian Band, [1990] 2 S.C.R. 85
The Morin Decision: An Excerpt
Nature’s Power and Native Persistence: The Influence of First Nations and the Environment is the Development of the Mattagami Hydro-Electric System During the Twentieth Century
Ojibwe Treaty Rights
Focuses on off-reservation treaty rights to hunt, fish, and gather in treaty-ceded lands in Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota.