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- Title
FROM RIGHTS RECOGNITION TO RECONCILIATION: REFLECTING ON THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA'S PROPOSED INDIGENOUS RIGHTS RECOGNITION FRAMEWORK.
- Authors
CAVE, JOANNE
- Abstract
In 2018, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced the development of an Indigenous Rights Recognition Framework. The framework is intended to provide a statutory alternative to the time and resource-intensive process of litigating Indigenous rights claims in the courts. The extensive criticisms mounted by Indigenous leaders, activists and legal scholars raise important questions about how Indigenous rights claims are best negotiated and resolved. This article argues that neither judicial nor statutory approaches to Indigenous rights recognition facilitate the substantive, systems-level change that is needed to achieve Canada's objective of meaningful reconciliation. Instead, the Government of Canada can strengthen the proposed approach in the following ways: (1) including proposals for meaningful constitutional amendments; (2) empowering existing judicial processes to incorporate Indigenous legal traditions and harmonize Indigenous, common and civil law traditions; (3) allowing First Nations and Indigenous communities to introduce their own constitutions and giving existing constitutions full legal force and effect; and (4) altering the structure of the alternative dispute resolution body proposed in the framework.
- Subjects
CANADA; INDIGENOUS rights; TRUDEAU, Justin, 1971-; RECONCILIATION; CIVIL law
- Publication
University of Toronto Faculty of Law Review, 2019, Vol 77, Issue 2, p59
- ISSN
0381-1638
- Publication type
Article