Treaty-making from an indigenous perspective : a ned’u’ten-canadian treaty model

This thesis argues that the Ned'u'ten, an indigenous people, have the right to decolonize and self-determine their political and legal status at the international level. The Ned'u'ten are currently negotiating a new relationship with Canada and are considering various treaty mode...

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Main Author: McCue, Lorna June
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Allard Research Commons 2009
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Online Access:https://commons.allard.ubc.ca/theses/143
https://open.library.ubc.ca/cIRcle/collections/ubctheses/24/items/1.0077485
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author McCue, Lorna June
author_facet McCue, Lorna June
author_sort McCue, Lorna June
collection Allard Research Commons (Peter A. Allard School of Law)
description This thesis argues that the Ned'u'ten, an indigenous people, have the right to decolonize and self-determine their political and legal status at the international level. The Ned'u'ten are currently negotiating a new relationship with Canada and are considering various treaty models to achieve this goal. This thesis advocates principles for a peace treaty model that accomplishes both Ned'u'ten decolonization and self-determination. The first chapter of this thesis demonstrates that indigenous perspectives in legal culture are diverse and not homogeneous. My Ned'u'ten perspective on treaty-making contributes to these perspectives. The second chapter challenges the legitimacy of the Canadian state, over Ned'u'ten subjects and territories. This is accomplished through the rejection of dispossession doctrines that Canada has used to justify colonial and oppressive practices against the Ned'u'ten. Decolonization principles are prescribed in this chapter. The third chapter takes a historical view of the right to self-determination and shows how state practice, indigenous peoples' participation, and international scholars have attempted to articulate the scope and content of this right in the contemporary context of indigenous self-determination. A Ned'u'ten self-determination framework is proposed based on indigenous formulations of the right to self-determination. Self-determination principles are also prescribed in this chapter. The final chapter compares two cases where indigenous peoples in Canada are attempting to create a new relationship with the state: the James Bay Cree and "First Nations" in the British Columbia Treaty Commission Process. This comparison will show that the degree of participation that indigenous peoples have in implementing their rights to self-determination, will determine the parameters of any new relationship that indigenous peoples create with the state. Negotiating principles are prescribed for a Ned'u'ten-Canada relationship as well as a peace treaty process to accomplish this goal. It is my thesis that the Ned'u'ten and Canada can achieve a peaceful and balanced relationship through the peace treaty model I propose.
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First Nations
James Bay
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First Nations
James Bay
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spelling ftubritcolallard:oai:commons.allard.ubc.ca:theses-1142 2025-01-16T21:36:39+00:00 Treaty-making from an indigenous perspective : a ned’u’ten-canadian treaty model McCue, Lorna June 2009-05-27T07:00:00Z text/html https://commons.allard.ubc.ca/theses/143 https://open.library.ubc.ca/cIRcle/collections/ubctheses/24/items/1.0077485 unknown Allard Research Commons https://commons.allard.ubc.ca/theses/143 https://open.library.ubc.ca/cIRcle/collections/ubctheses/24/items/1.0077485 For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. Graduate Theses and Dissertations Dakelh--Self determination First Nations--Self determination--British Columbia First Nations--Decolonization--British Columbia First Nations--Legal status laws etc.--British Columbia First Nations--Treaty process--British Columbia text 2009 ftubritcolallard 2022-01-30T16:33:00Z This thesis argues that the Ned'u'ten, an indigenous people, have the right to decolonize and self-determine their political and legal status at the international level. The Ned'u'ten are currently negotiating a new relationship with Canada and are considering various treaty models to achieve this goal. This thesis advocates principles for a peace treaty model that accomplishes both Ned'u'ten decolonization and self-determination. The first chapter of this thesis demonstrates that indigenous perspectives in legal culture are diverse and not homogeneous. My Ned'u'ten perspective on treaty-making contributes to these perspectives. The second chapter challenges the legitimacy of the Canadian state, over Ned'u'ten subjects and territories. This is accomplished through the rejection of dispossession doctrines that Canada has used to justify colonial and oppressive practices against the Ned'u'ten. Decolonization principles are prescribed in this chapter. The third chapter takes a historical view of the right to self-determination and shows how state practice, indigenous peoples' participation, and international scholars have attempted to articulate the scope and content of this right in the contemporary context of indigenous self-determination. A Ned'u'ten self-determination framework is proposed based on indigenous formulations of the right to self-determination. Self-determination principles are also prescribed in this chapter. The final chapter compares two cases where indigenous peoples in Canada are attempting to create a new relationship with the state: the James Bay Cree and "First Nations" in the British Columbia Treaty Commission Process. This comparison will show that the degree of participation that indigenous peoples have in implementing their rights to self-determination, will determine the parameters of any new relationship that indigenous peoples create with the state. Negotiating principles are prescribed for a Ned'u'ten-Canada relationship as well as a peace treaty process to accomplish this goal. It is my thesis that the Ned'u'ten and Canada can achieve a peaceful and balanced relationship through the peace treaty model I propose. Text Dakelh First Nations James Bay Allard Research Commons (Peter A. Allard School of Law) British Columbia ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000) Canada
spellingShingle Dakelh--Self determination
First Nations--Self determination--British Columbia
First Nations--Decolonization--British Columbia
First Nations--Legal status
laws
etc.--British Columbia
First Nations--Treaty process--British Columbia
McCue, Lorna June
Treaty-making from an indigenous perspective : a ned’u’ten-canadian treaty model
title Treaty-making from an indigenous perspective : a ned’u’ten-canadian treaty model
title_full Treaty-making from an indigenous perspective : a ned’u’ten-canadian treaty model
title_fullStr Treaty-making from an indigenous perspective : a ned’u’ten-canadian treaty model
title_full_unstemmed Treaty-making from an indigenous perspective : a ned’u’ten-canadian treaty model
title_short Treaty-making from an indigenous perspective : a ned’u’ten-canadian treaty model
title_sort treaty-making from an indigenous perspective : a ned’u’ten-canadian treaty model
topic Dakelh--Self determination
First Nations--Self determination--British Columbia
First Nations--Decolonization--British Columbia
First Nations--Legal status
laws
etc.--British Columbia
First Nations--Treaty process--British Columbia
topic_facet Dakelh--Self determination
First Nations--Self determination--British Columbia
First Nations--Decolonization--British Columbia
First Nations--Legal status
laws
etc.--British Columbia
First Nations--Treaty process--British Columbia
url https://commons.allard.ubc.ca/theses/143
https://open.library.ubc.ca/cIRcle/collections/ubctheses/24/items/1.0077485