Manitoba aboriginal treaties as vehicles for self-government, sentiments and skepticism

The method likely chosen by the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs and the federal government negotiators to implement Aboriginal self-government in Manitoba is a framework agreement process. The objectives are to dismantle the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, to develop and recognise...

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Main Author: Koppang, Michael C.
Language:en_US
Published: 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1203
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spelling ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-12032014-01-31T03:30:35Z Manitoba aboriginal treaties as vehicles for self-government, sentiments and skepticism Koppang, Michael C. The method likely chosen by the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs and the federal government negotiators to implement Aboriginal self-government in Manitoba is a framework agreement process. The objectives are to dismantle the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, to develop and recognise Aboriginal governments and to "restore jurisdiction" to those governments. The original "numbered" treaties and the rights derived from them theoretically form the basis of this process. One potential effect of using treaty rights for this change is constitutional entrenchment without formal amendment. This study explores the legal basis of the original numbered treaties and the legal nature of the treaty rights, for the purpose of examining whether executive agreements are the best way to implement Aboriginal self-government in Manitoba. The historical and legal evidence suggests a royal prerogative source for Aboriginal treaties. It is from this basis that questions concerning the mixing of the law of fiduciary obligations with the law surrounding Aboriginal treaties are raised. This leads to an examination of "rights" and their suitability for anchoring a self-government scheme. This study concludes by questioning the legal authority of using executive agreements based on treaty rights to alter fundamentally the Canadian constitution without a formal amendment process. 2007-05-15T19:05:31Z 2007-05-15T19:05:31Z 1997-04-01T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1203 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description The method likely chosen by the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs and the federal government negotiators to implement Aboriginal self-government in Manitoba is a framework agreement process. The objectives are to dismantle the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, to develop and recognise Aboriginal governments and to "restore jurisdiction" to those governments. The original "numbered" treaties and the rights derived from them theoretically form the basis of this process. One potential effect of using treaty rights for this change is constitutional entrenchment without formal amendment. This study explores the legal basis of the original numbered treaties and the legal nature of the treaty rights, for the purpose of examining whether executive agreements are the best way to implement Aboriginal self-government in Manitoba. The historical and legal evidence suggests a royal prerogative source for Aboriginal treaties. It is from this basis that questions concerning the mixing of the law of fiduciary obligations with the law surrounding Aboriginal treaties are raised. This leads to an examination of "rights" and their suitability for anchoring a self-government scheme. This study concludes by questioning the legal authority of using executive agreements based on treaty rights to alter fundamentally the Canadian constitution without a formal amendment process.
author Koppang, Michael C.
spellingShingle Koppang, Michael C.
Manitoba aboriginal treaties as vehicles for self-government, sentiments and skepticism
author_facet Koppang, Michael C.
author_sort Koppang, Michael C.
title Manitoba aboriginal treaties as vehicles for self-government, sentiments and skepticism
title_short Manitoba aboriginal treaties as vehicles for self-government, sentiments and skepticism
title_full Manitoba aboriginal treaties as vehicles for self-government, sentiments and skepticism
title_fullStr Manitoba aboriginal treaties as vehicles for self-government, sentiments and skepticism
title_full_unstemmed Manitoba aboriginal treaties as vehicles for self-government, sentiments and skepticism
title_sort manitoba aboriginal treaties as vehicles for self-government, sentiments and skepticism
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1203
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