37 research outputs found
God Gave Us This Land: The OvaHimba, the Proposed Epupa Dam, the Independent Namibian State, and Law and Development in Africa
The Incorporation of Alaska Natives Under American Law: The United States and Tlingit Sovereignty, 1867-1900
German Reparations to the Herero Nation: An Assertion of Herero Nationhood in the Path of Namibian Development
Review of \u3ci\u3eCompact, Contract, Covenant: Aboriginal Treaty Making in Canada\u3c/i\u3e. By J.R. Miller.
In Canada, the term First Nations explicitly recognizes a nation-to-nation relationship between the Crown and the original inhabitants of North America that requires treaty making as the primary political and legal process for the taking of Indian lands and the incorporation of Indian nations into the multinational Canadian state. There are great political difficulties embodied in this process, including the continued impoverishment and marginalization of the First Nations, and the repeated failure of successive Canadian governments to carry out their responsibilities under these treaties, but the treaty process remains the required process. J.R. Miller, perhaps Canada\u27s leading scholar of Aboriginal history, takes on an ambitious project, a sweeping history of treaty making in Canada with the express goal of making this process understandable to all Canadians in order to promote interracial reconciliation. This is an ambitious book, the first history of treaty making in Canada intended for the general reader as well as for academic historians
Review of \u3ci\u3eCompact, Contract, Covenant: Aboriginal Treaty Making in Canada\u3c/i\u3e. By J.R. Miller.
In Canada, the term First Nations explicitly recognizes a nation-to-nation relationship between the Crown and the original inhabitants of North America that requires treaty making as the primary political and legal process for the taking of Indian lands and the incorporation of Indian nations into the multinational Canadian state. There are great political difficulties embodied in this process, including the continued impoverishment and marginalization of the First Nations, and the repeated failure of successive Canadian governments to carry out their responsibilities under these treaties, but the treaty process remains the required process. J.R. Miller, perhaps Canada\u27s leading scholar of Aboriginal history, takes on an ambitious project, a sweeping history of treaty making in Canada with the express goal of making this process understandable to all Canadians in order to promote interracial reconciliation. This is an ambitious book, the first history of treaty making in Canada intended for the general reader as well as for academic historians