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Keeping the land : Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug, reconciliation and Canadian law
Xwi7xwa Library, University of British Columbia

Book
Creators
Ariss, Rachel
Contributors
Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug First Nation.
Description
"Documenting how the Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug’s traditional territory was threatened by mining exploration in 2006, this chronicle reveals how the people followed their_customary duty to protect the land, asking the mining exploration company to leave. The company left—and then sued the remote First Nation for $10 billion, and the ensuing legal dispute lasted two years only to result in the jailing of community leaders. This book argues that, although this imprisonment was extraordinarily punitive and is indicative of continuing colonialism within the legal system, some aspects of the case demonstrate the potential of Canadian law to understand, include, and reflect Aboriginal perspectives. Connecting scholarship in Aboriginal rights, Canadian law, traditional Aboriginal law, social change, and community activism, this history explores the twists and turns of this legal dispute in order to gain a deeper understanding of the law’s contributions to and detractions from the process of reconciliation. "

More Information

ISBN
9781552664773
Statement of Responsibility
Rachel Ariss ; with John Cutfeet.
Publication Information
Halifax : Fernwood Pub.
Physical Description
176 p. : ill., maps 23 cm
Contents
2/ Platinex V. Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug -- 2. Land and community, law and mining in northern Ontario -- 3. Three laws converge on this place Kanawayadan D'akki and Indigenous law -- 4. Resistance, law and community organizing -- 5. Law, legal process and reconciliation in Plantinex V. Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug -- 6. Reconciliation -- 7. Impasse and change.
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