Holdings Information
Freedom and indigenous constitutionalism / John Borrows.
Bibliographic Record Display
-
Title:Freedom and indigenous constitutionalism / John Borrows.
-
Author/Creator:Borrows, John, 1963- author.
-
Published/Created:Toronto ; Buffalo : University of Toronto Press, [2016]
-
Holdings
Holdings Record Display
-
Location:
c.1
Temporarily shelved at LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2)Where is this?
-
Call Number: KE7709 .B6738 2016
-
Number of Items:1
-
Status:Available
-
Location:OKANAGAN LIBRARY stacksWhere is this?
-
Call Number: KE7709 .B6738 2016
-
Number of Items:1
-
Status:Available
-
Location:
c.1
Temporarily shelved at LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2)Where is this?
-
Library of Congress Subjects:Indigenous peoples--Legal status, laws, etc.--Canada.
Indigenous peoples--Canada--Politics and government.
Indigenous peoples--Civil rights--Canada.
Ojibwa law.
-
Description:x, 371 pages ; 24 cm
-
ISBN:9781442630932 (cloth)
1442630930 (cloth)
9781442629233 (paper)
1442629231 (paper)
-
Contents:Machine generated contents note: 1. Physical Philosophy: Mobility and Indigenous Freedom
A. Methodologies of Mobility: Physical Philosophy
B. Models of Mobility
C. Manipulating Mobility: Settled and Unsettled Law
i). `Damned if We Move': The Too Unsettled Thesis
ii). `... and Damned if We Don't': The Too Settled Thesis
D. Recognizing and Affirming Indigenous Physical Mobility
E. Recognizing and Affirming Indigenous Conceptual Mobility
i). Indigenous Governments and Personal Relationships
ii). Indigenous Governments and Institutional Relationships
F. Conclusion
2. Civil (Dis)Obedience, Freedom, and Democracy
A. Moving Beyond Abstractions: Remembering Grounded Histories
B. Group One: Best Practices (so far) in Indigenous Civil (Dis)obedience
i). Moresby Island, Haida Gwaii, British Columbia
ii). James Bay
iii). Chippewas of the Nawash
iv). Clayoquot Sound
C. Group Two: Helping Others, Failing at Home
i). Oka/Kanesatake, Quebec
ii). Burnt Church
D. Group Three: Diminishing Democracy and Eroding Freedom, Generally and Specifically
i). Anicinabe Park
ii). Algonquins of Barriere Lake
iii). Temagami Anishinaabe
E. Conclusion
3. Indigenous Freedom and Canadian Constitutionalism
A. Constitutional Complexities
B. Constitutional Suspicions
C. Constitutional Discussions
D. Constitutional Amendment: Strategies and Debates
E. Constitutional Entrenchment
F. Constitutional Conferences and Accords
G. Conclusion
4. (Ab)Originalism and Canada's Constitution
A. (Ab)Originalism and Living Trees: Analysing Modes of Interpretation
B. (Ab)Originalism and the Canons of Construction
i). Treaties, Originalism, and the Canons of Construction
ii). Aboriginal Rights, Originalism, and the Canons of Construction
C. (Ab)Originalism as Adverse Discrimination
D. Three Alternatives to (Ab)Originalism
E. Indigenous Legal Traditions, Living Trees, and Originalism
F. Conclusion
5. Legislation and Indigenous Self-Determination in Canada and the United States
A. Indigenous Control of Federal Services
B. Protection of Indigenous Cultures and Communities
C. Indigenous Control in Relation to Economic Development, Environment, and Natural Resources
D. Conclusion
6. Aboriginal and Treaty Rights and Violence against Women
A. Problem and/or the Answer: Indigenous Self-Determination and Violence against Women
B. Indigenous Governments: Can They Be Trusted?
C. Section 35(1) and Violence against Women
i). Aboriginal Rights: Violence against Women and the `Integral to the Distinctive Culture' Test
ii). Violence against Women and Treaties
D. Conclusion.