Description

Book Synopsis

In 1982, after decades of determined mobilization by Aboriginal groups and their allies, the government of Canada formally recognized Aboriginal rights within its Constitution. The move reflected a consensus that states should and could use constitutionally enshrined group rights to protect and accommodate subnational groups within their borders. Decades later, however, almost no one is happy with the current state of Aboriginal rights in Canada, nor is there a consensus on what is wrong with these rights or how they can be fixed. Uncertain Accommodation tells the story of what went wrong.

Dimitrios Panagos argues that the failure of Canada's Aboriginal rights jurisprudence is ultimately rooted in our inability to agree on what aboriginality means. Through incisive analysis of judicial decisions, legal submissions, and academic debates, he reveals the plurality of conceptions of aboriginality put forth over the past three decades and shows how the vision of Aboriginal

Trade Review

This book is highly recommended for professionals, scholars, and graduate students or simply for those interested in understanding how the state handles identity and group-related rights.

-- E. Acevedo, California State University, Los Angeles * CHOICE *

…Panagos succeeds in giving the intricate and controversial topic of aboriginality thorough treatment in a concise manner. Uncertain Accommodation generates interesting discussion that accommodates all readers, regardless of legal expertise … [This book] adds to the literature by providing a balanced and sophisticated analysis of where Canadian jurisprudence went wrong regarding the definition of Aboriginal rights, and what can be done to improve the situation.

-- Braeden Pivnick * Saskatchewan Law Review *

Table of Contents

Introduction

1 The Historical and Legal Framework for Section 35

2 Competing Approaches and Conceptualizations of Aboriginality

3 The Case for a Relational Approach

4 The Nation-to-Nation, Colonial, and Citizen-State Approaches

5 Submissions to the Court

6 What the Justices Said

7 Aboriginal Rights Jurisprudence and Identity Contestation

8 A Problematic Conception of Rights

Conclusion

Notes

References

Index

Uncertain Accommodation

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    A Hardback by Dimitrios Panagos

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      Publisher: University of British Columbia Press
      Publication Date: 21/09/2016
      ISBN13: 9780774832380, 978-0774832380
      ISBN10: 077483238X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      In 1982, after decades of determined mobilization by Aboriginal groups and their allies, the government of Canada formally recognized Aboriginal rights within its Constitution. The move reflected a consensus that states should and could use constitutionally enshrined group rights to protect and accommodate subnational groups within their borders. Decades later, however, almost no one is happy with the current state of Aboriginal rights in Canada, nor is there a consensus on what is wrong with these rights or how they can be fixed. Uncertain Accommodation tells the story of what went wrong.

      Dimitrios Panagos argues that the failure of Canada's Aboriginal rights jurisprudence is ultimately rooted in our inability to agree on what aboriginality means. Through incisive analysis of judicial decisions, legal submissions, and academic debates, he reveals the plurality of conceptions of aboriginality put forth over the past three decades and shows how the vision of Aboriginal

      Trade Review

      This book is highly recommended for professionals, scholars, and graduate students or simply for those interested in understanding how the state handles identity and group-related rights.

      -- E. Acevedo, California State University, Los Angeles * CHOICE *

      …Panagos succeeds in giving the intricate and controversial topic of aboriginality thorough treatment in a concise manner. Uncertain Accommodation generates interesting discussion that accommodates all readers, regardless of legal expertise … [This book] adds to the literature by providing a balanced and sophisticated analysis of where Canadian jurisprudence went wrong regarding the definition of Aboriginal rights, and what can be done to improve the situation.

      -- Braeden Pivnick * Saskatchewan Law Review *

      Table of Contents

      Introduction

      1 The Historical and Legal Framework for Section 35

      2 Competing Approaches and Conceptualizations of Aboriginality

      3 The Case for a Relational Approach

      4 The Nation-to-Nation, Colonial, and Citizen-State Approaches

      5 Submissions to the Court

      6 What the Justices Said

      7 Aboriginal Rights Jurisprudence and Identity Contestation

      8 A Problematic Conception of Rights

      Conclusion

      Notes

      References

      Index

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