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Indigenous, Indian, and Aboriginal Law

1992

Canada

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

Child Welfare Law, "Best Interests Of The Child" Ideology, And First Nations, Marlee Kline Apr 1992

Child Welfare Law, "Best Interests Of The Child" Ideology, And First Nations, Marlee Kline

Osgoode Hall Law Journal

Liberalism has structured legal discourse such that racism is most often unintended and rarely explicit. To understand how and why law has an oppressive and discriminatory impact on First Nations and other racialized groups in Canadian society, one must look at some of its more subtle processes and, in particular, its ideological form. The goal of this article is to provide insight into the origins and operation of "best interests of the child" ideology and to illustrate how it structures and constrains judicial decision making in the context of First Nations child welfare. Best interests ideology serves to portray the …


A Genealogy Of Law: Inherent Sovereignty And First Nations Self-Government, John J. Borrows Apr 1992

A Genealogy Of Law: Inherent Sovereignty And First Nations Self-Government, John J. Borrows

Osgoode Hall Law Journal

First Nations self-government in Canada has often been regarded as extinguished or delegated from the British Crown or the Canadian federal government. First Nations self-government among the Chippewas of the Nawash Band in southern Ontario has not been extinguished or delegated, but continues to exist as an inherent exercise of community sovereignty. The idea of existing Aboriginal self-government in modern-day Ontario contrasts with many prevailing notions about Native society in Canada today. The inherent and unextinguished nature of self-government among the Nawash Band is demonstrated by examining the events of the author's ancestors and community in their interactions with foreign …