A lawless life, unrest and strife? : the existence of Aboriginal customary law in Manitoba First Nations communities : an exploratory study

The literature dealing with traditional methods of dispute resolution indicate that increasing support is found for the contention that the application of customary law in First Nations communities is the most promising route to improving upon the current dismal relationship between First Nations pe...

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Main Author: Cormier, E. Frank
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/7389
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spelling ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/7389 2023-06-18T03:40:37+02:00 A lawless life, unrest and strife? : the existence of Aboriginal customary law in Manitoba First Nations communities : an exploratory study Cormier, E. Frank 1996 vi, 104 leaves : application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1993/7389 eng eng (Sirsi) AJQ-6393 http://hdl.handle.net/1993/7389 open access master thesis 1996 ftunivmanitoba 2023-06-04T17:43:08Z The literature dealing with traditional methods of dispute resolution indicate that increasing support is found for the contention that the application of customary law in First Nations communities is the most promising route to improving upon the current dismal relationship between First Nations peoples and the Canadian criminal justice system. There is, however, a lack of information regarding the current state of knowledge of - and belief in - customary law. This is compounded by a lack of clear descriptions of its content. This research is intended to address these questions through an examination of current attitudes of First Nations peoples in Manitoba toward customary law. Data were collected through interviews conducted in the member-communities of the West Region Tribal Council. Respondents were asked to describe what they believed to be the most appropriate response to several detailed hypothetical instances of deviance. Respondents were drawn from three age groups: "older" (56 years and over), "middle aged" (36-55 years), and "young" (18-35 years). Analysis of the data showed that the three age groups applied three differing methodologies for responding to deviant acts. The "older" group displayed a "community focus", the middle aged group a "family focus" or "mixed focus", and the young group a "state focused" approach to deviance-response. Analysis of the content of customary law shows that context, restoration, prevention, publicity, group decision-making, and apology/forgiveness are its central elements. Belief in customary methods of dispute resolution remains strong among the older respondents. It is concluded that while the application of customary law is a viable and desirable option for justice initiatives in the future, caution must be exercised in the design of any such programs to ensure recognition of the complexity of this issue.- Master Thesis First Nations MSpace at the University of Manitoba
institution Open Polar
collection MSpace at the University of Manitoba
op_collection_id ftunivmanitoba
language English
description The literature dealing with traditional methods of dispute resolution indicate that increasing support is found for the contention that the application of customary law in First Nations communities is the most promising route to improving upon the current dismal relationship between First Nations peoples and the Canadian criminal justice system. There is, however, a lack of information regarding the current state of knowledge of - and belief in - customary law. This is compounded by a lack of clear descriptions of its content. This research is intended to address these questions through an examination of current attitudes of First Nations peoples in Manitoba toward customary law. Data were collected through interviews conducted in the member-communities of the West Region Tribal Council. Respondents were asked to describe what they believed to be the most appropriate response to several detailed hypothetical instances of deviance. Respondents were drawn from three age groups: "older" (56 years and over), "middle aged" (36-55 years), and "young" (18-35 years). Analysis of the data showed that the three age groups applied three differing methodologies for responding to deviant acts. The "older" group displayed a "community focus", the middle aged group a "family focus" or "mixed focus", and the young group a "state focused" approach to deviance-response. Analysis of the content of customary law shows that context, restoration, prevention, publicity, group decision-making, and apology/forgiveness are its central elements. Belief in customary methods of dispute resolution remains strong among the older respondents. It is concluded that while the application of customary law is a viable and desirable option for justice initiatives in the future, caution must be exercised in the design of any such programs to ensure recognition of the complexity of this issue.-
format Master Thesis
author Cormier, E. Frank
spellingShingle Cormier, E. Frank
A lawless life, unrest and strife? : the existence of Aboriginal customary law in Manitoba First Nations communities : an exploratory study
author_facet Cormier, E. Frank
author_sort Cormier, E. Frank
title A lawless life, unrest and strife? : the existence of Aboriginal customary law in Manitoba First Nations communities : an exploratory study
title_short A lawless life, unrest and strife? : the existence of Aboriginal customary law in Manitoba First Nations communities : an exploratory study
title_full A lawless life, unrest and strife? : the existence of Aboriginal customary law in Manitoba First Nations communities : an exploratory study
title_fullStr A lawless life, unrest and strife? : the existence of Aboriginal customary law in Manitoba First Nations communities : an exploratory study
title_full_unstemmed A lawless life, unrest and strife? : the existence of Aboriginal customary law in Manitoba First Nations communities : an exploratory study
title_sort lawless life, unrest and strife? : the existence of aboriginal customary law in manitoba first nations communities : an exploratory study
publishDate 1996
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/7389
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation (Sirsi) AJQ-6393
http://hdl.handle.net/1993/7389
op_rights open access
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