"Home and native land" : how the Eeyouch in Quebec and the Sami in Norway used hydropower developments to democratize legislation

This comparative study examines how Indigenous people, the Eeyouch in Québec and the Sámi in Norway, have secured their right to be consulted prior to new developments on their land through the James Bay and Northern Québec Agreement and the Finnmarksloven. The longstanding tension between notions o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Holden, Ann Aasfrid
Other Authors: Burton, Christopher, MacDonald, Heidi
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Lethbridge, Alta. : University of Lethbridge, Dept. of History 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10133/3519
id ftunivlethb:oai:opus.uleth.ca:10133/3519
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivlethb:oai:opus.uleth.ca:10133/3519 2023-05-15T18:11:27+02:00 "Home and native land" : how the Eeyouch in Quebec and the Sami in Norway used hydropower developments to democratize legislation Holden, Ann Aasfrid Burton, Christopher MacDonald, Heidi 2014 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10133/3519 en_CA eng Lethbridge, Alta. : University of Lethbridge, Dept. of History Arts and Science Department of History Thesis (University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Arts and Science) https://hdl.handle.net/10133/3519 Eeyouch collective land ownership hydropower indigenous law James Bay Cree Sami private property laws Habermas Ostrom E.P. Thompson Thesis 2014 ftunivlethb 2021-06-27T07:19:44Z This comparative study examines how Indigenous people, the Eeyouch in Québec and the Sámi in Norway, have secured their right to be consulted prior to new developments on their land through the James Bay and Northern Québec Agreement and the Finnmarksloven. The longstanding tension between notions of private property and collective land-use rights are also found in these laws: the Agreement broke loose from the Indian Act’s patrilineal base of collective land ownership, and the Finnmarksloven emphasized land as important to Sámi culture while recognizing the local reality of ethnic diversity. Consultation based on dialogue with an aim to reach consensus was an important aspect of traditional Indigenous law-making. Ostrom’s theories on local land governance, combined with Habermas’ theories on colonization of the lifeworld, are used to illuminate the Sámi and Eeyouch agency to incorporate their own cultural and normative aspects into national laws. Thesis sami sami Sámi James Bay University of Lethbridge Institutional Repository Norway Indian
institution Open Polar
collection University of Lethbridge Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftunivlethb
language English
topic Eeyouch
collective land ownership
hydropower
indigenous law
James Bay Cree
Sami
private property laws
Habermas
Ostrom
E.P. Thompson
spellingShingle Eeyouch
collective land ownership
hydropower
indigenous law
James Bay Cree
Sami
private property laws
Habermas
Ostrom
E.P. Thompson
Holden, Ann Aasfrid
"Home and native land" : how the Eeyouch in Quebec and the Sami in Norway used hydropower developments to democratize legislation
topic_facet Eeyouch
collective land ownership
hydropower
indigenous law
James Bay Cree
Sami
private property laws
Habermas
Ostrom
E.P. Thompson
description This comparative study examines how Indigenous people, the Eeyouch in Québec and the Sámi in Norway, have secured their right to be consulted prior to new developments on their land through the James Bay and Northern Québec Agreement and the Finnmarksloven. The longstanding tension between notions of private property and collective land-use rights are also found in these laws: the Agreement broke loose from the Indian Act’s patrilineal base of collective land ownership, and the Finnmarksloven emphasized land as important to Sámi culture while recognizing the local reality of ethnic diversity. Consultation based on dialogue with an aim to reach consensus was an important aspect of traditional Indigenous law-making. Ostrom’s theories on local land governance, combined with Habermas’ theories on colonization of the lifeworld, are used to illuminate the Sámi and Eeyouch agency to incorporate their own cultural and normative aspects into national laws.
author2 Burton, Christopher
MacDonald, Heidi
format Thesis
author Holden, Ann Aasfrid
author_facet Holden, Ann Aasfrid
author_sort Holden, Ann Aasfrid
title "Home and native land" : how the Eeyouch in Quebec and the Sami in Norway used hydropower developments to democratize legislation
title_short "Home and native land" : how the Eeyouch in Quebec and the Sami in Norway used hydropower developments to democratize legislation
title_full "Home and native land" : how the Eeyouch in Quebec and the Sami in Norway used hydropower developments to democratize legislation
title_fullStr "Home and native land" : how the Eeyouch in Quebec and the Sami in Norway used hydropower developments to democratize legislation
title_full_unstemmed "Home and native land" : how the Eeyouch in Quebec and the Sami in Norway used hydropower developments to democratize legislation
title_sort "home and native land" : how the eeyouch in quebec and the sami in norway used hydropower developments to democratize legislation
publisher Lethbridge, Alta. : University of Lethbridge, Dept. of History
publishDate 2014
url https://hdl.handle.net/10133/3519
geographic Norway
Indian
geographic_facet Norway
Indian
genre sami
sami
Sámi
James Bay
genre_facet sami
sami
Sámi
James Bay
op_relation Thesis (University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Arts and Science)
https://hdl.handle.net/10133/3519
_version_ 1766184112459087872