In this provocative and passionate book, Dan Russell argues that Aboriginal self-government is an attainable objective best achieved through a constitutional amendment, not through treaties, as has been the preoccupation of provincial and federal governments since 1982. He claims that reliance on treaties as an instrument of self-government is misguided and doomed to failure.
In this provocative and passionate book, Dan Russell argues that Aboriginal self-government is an attainable objective best achieved through a constitutional amendment, not through treaties, as has been the preoccupation of provincial and federal governments since 1982. He claims that reliance on treaties as an instrument of self-government is misguided and doomed to failure.
Daniel Russell is an Aboriginal lawyer who practises in Toronto.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface Acknowledgments Introduction 1 The Self-Government Ideal: A Recent Concept 2 The American Tribal Government Experience: Lessons for Canada 3 Entrenching Self-Government: The Treaty Option 4 Entrenching Self-Government: The "Principled Approach" 5 Historical Aboriginal Collective Rights 6 Aboriginal Values versus Charter Rights 7 A Metaphorical Charter: An Aboriginal Response 8 The Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples and Self-Government: Just Another Lump of Coal 9 The Future of Self-Government: Building Trust and Confidence Notes Selected Bibliography Index
Preface Acknowledgments Introduction 1 The Self-Government Ideal: A Recent Concept 2 The American Tribal Government Experience: Lessons for Canada 3 Entrenching Self-Government: The Treaty Option 4 Entrenching Self-Government: The "Principled Approach" 5 Historical Aboriginal Collective Rights 6 Aboriginal Values versus Charter Rights 7 A Metaphorical Charter: An Aboriginal Response 8 The Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples and Self-Government: Just Another Lump of Coal 9 The Future of Self-Government: Building Trust and Confidence Notes Selected Bibliography Index
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