Finding Your Allies Where You Can: How Canadian Courts Drive Aboriginal Policy in Canada
While it has been valuable to Aboriginal peoples to have the courts as allies in their fight for state recognition, it is worth asking whether the slow, expensive, incremental process of achieving recognition through litigation is really the most efficient, let alone just, policy development process...
Main Author: | Ian Peach |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
University of Alberta
2011-04-01
|
Series: | Aboriginal Policy Studies |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/aps/index.php/aps/article/view/8611 |
Similar Items
-
Women’s rights and minorities’ rights in Canada. The challenges of intersectionality in Supreme Court jurisprudence
by: Scotti Valentina Rita
Published: (2017-12-01) -
Aboriginality, existing aboriginal rights and state accommodation in Canada
by: Panagos, Dimitrios
Published: (2008) -
Healing Generational Trauma in Aboriginal Canadians
by: Jocelyn Chase
Published: (2018-09-01) -
The Urban Aboriginal Middle-Income Group in Canada: A Demographic Profile
by: Amanda Parriag, et al.
Published: (2013-02-01) -
Diabetes mellitus and the Aboriginal diabetic initiative in Canada: An update review
by: Lawrence Leung
Published: (2016-01-01)