Editor(s)
Carole Goldberg, Kevin K. Washburn & Philip P. Frickey
Files
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Description
Canada is grappling with legal issues surrounding indigenous property rights on a scale not seen in the United States since the mid-nineteenth century. Fundamental questions of fairness and justice related to indigenous peoples’ property rights are in flux in the province of British Columbia–an area the size of the states of California, Oregon, and Washington combined. The recognition of aboriginal rights in the Canadian Constitution in 1982 and recent judicial developments made it clear to the provincial government that nearly the entire province may be subject to aboriginal title claims. Consequently, the aboriginal nations and B.C. government have embarked on a treaty process to resolve conflicting interests, but not in the fashion utilized in the United States.
In the U.S., treaties and agreements with Indian tribes generally resulted in the extinguishment of all indigenous property rights in sweeping terms. In addition, payment of compensation pursuant to the Indian Claims Commission process extinguished legal claims to lands taken previously without payment of compensation. To be sure, most of the roughly three hundred tribes in the contiguous forty-eight states reserved homelands, or were moved to other areas set aside for their use and occupancy, and some retained extensive rights to access off-reservation wildlife resources.
In British Columbia, however, no earlier treaties ceded aboriginal lands, and the provincial government has recognized that the “extinguishment” of aboriginal title is unacceptable to aboriginal nations. There are over sixty aboriginal nations engaged in forty-nine sets of negotiations with a stated goal of reconciling aboriginal rights and title with the fact the non-aboriginal people and governments are in Canada to stay. This chapter explores the foundation beneath the current negotiations.
Title of Book
Indian Law Stories
ISBN
9781599417295
Publication Date
2011
Document Type
Book Chapter
Publisher
Foundation Press/Thomson Reuters
City
New York
Keywords
Indian gaming, sovereignty, treaties, water rights
Disciplines
Indigenous, Indian, and Aboriginal Law
Recommended Citation
Robert T. Anderson,
Aboriginal Title in the Canadian Legal System: The Story of Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, in
Indian Law Stories
591
(Carole Goldberg, Kevin K. Washburn & Philip P. Frickey eds., 2011).
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/faculty-chapters/2