The Allocation of Burdens in Litigation Between First Nations and the Crown

This thesis is about two inter-related matters: first, the allocation of burdens of proof in litigation between First Nations and the Crown; and, secondly, the reaction or response of the Crown to the Court’s allocations of burdens, as evidenced in the subsequent cases. Since “burdens of proof” refe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Posluns, Michael Wilfred
Other Authors: Scott, Dayna Nadine
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Law
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10315/27996
id ftyorkuniv:oai:yorkspace.library.yorku.ca:10315/27996
record_format openpolar
spelling ftyorkuniv:oai:yorkspace.library.yorku.ca:10315/27996 2023-05-15T16:15:30+02:00 The Allocation of Burdens in Litigation Between First Nations and the Crown Posluns, Michael Wilfred Scott, Dayna Nadine 2014-11-19T14:09:59Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10315/27996 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10315/27996 Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests. Law Native American studies Aboriginal First Nations Crown Litigation Burden of proof Electronic Thesis or Dissertation 2014 ftyorkuniv 2022-08-22T13:08:58Z This thesis is about two inter-related matters: first, the allocation of burdens of proof in litigation between First Nations and the Crown; and, secondly, the reaction or response of the Crown to the Court’s allocations of burdens, as evidenced in the subsequent cases. Since “burdens of proof” refers to matters of fact and evidence, I refer simply to “burdens”, emphasizing that, I mean all the burdens allocated by a Court and which the Court expects the parties to discharge in order for their case to succeed. My initial interest was in the response of the Crown to the allocation of burdens by the Court and related admonitions. In pursuing this matter it became evident that I needed to establish what allocations the Court had set out and what admonitions it had made as regards previous arguments of the Crown. There are two sets of viewpoints that I examine in this paper: The first is the jurisprudential view as to the allocation of burdens in the Aboriginal and treaty rights cases that I discuss here. The second is the more political and policy-based view of the Crown, federal or provincial, as to its burdens of proof and related burdens, such as the duty to consult and to accommodate, previously set out by the Court. This divergence between the Court’s view and the Crown’s and the recurring indications that the Crown does not intend to accept the Court’s view is my primary interest. I will, at times, refer to the Crown’s attitude, exemplified by this divergence as “recalcitrant” and its behaviour as “recidivism”. It is this divergence between the Court’s interpretations and the Crown’s actions and arguments which is my primary interest throughout this discussion. As a lens through which to examine this divergence I review two bodies of literature on theoretical constructs useful in understanding how the Government seeks to shift certain proof burdens onto First Nations parties. The first is the idea of “purposive interpretation” as it is discussed by Chief Justice Dickson and Justice La Forest in Sparrow, and ... Thesis First Nations York University, Toronto: YorkSpace
institution Open Polar
collection York University, Toronto: YorkSpace
op_collection_id ftyorkuniv
language English
topic Law
Native American studies
Aboriginal
First Nations
Crown
Litigation
Burden of proof
spellingShingle Law
Native American studies
Aboriginal
First Nations
Crown
Litigation
Burden of proof
Posluns, Michael Wilfred
The Allocation of Burdens in Litigation Between First Nations and the Crown
topic_facet Law
Native American studies
Aboriginal
First Nations
Crown
Litigation
Burden of proof
description This thesis is about two inter-related matters: first, the allocation of burdens of proof in litigation between First Nations and the Crown; and, secondly, the reaction or response of the Crown to the Court’s allocations of burdens, as evidenced in the subsequent cases. Since “burdens of proof” refers to matters of fact and evidence, I refer simply to “burdens”, emphasizing that, I mean all the burdens allocated by a Court and which the Court expects the parties to discharge in order for their case to succeed. My initial interest was in the response of the Crown to the allocation of burdens by the Court and related admonitions. In pursuing this matter it became evident that I needed to establish what allocations the Court had set out and what admonitions it had made as regards previous arguments of the Crown. There are two sets of viewpoints that I examine in this paper: The first is the jurisprudential view as to the allocation of burdens in the Aboriginal and treaty rights cases that I discuss here. The second is the more political and policy-based view of the Crown, federal or provincial, as to its burdens of proof and related burdens, such as the duty to consult and to accommodate, previously set out by the Court. This divergence between the Court’s view and the Crown’s and the recurring indications that the Crown does not intend to accept the Court’s view is my primary interest. I will, at times, refer to the Crown’s attitude, exemplified by this divergence as “recalcitrant” and its behaviour as “recidivism”. It is this divergence between the Court’s interpretations and the Crown’s actions and arguments which is my primary interest throughout this discussion. As a lens through which to examine this divergence I review two bodies of literature on theoretical constructs useful in understanding how the Government seeks to shift certain proof burdens onto First Nations parties. The first is the idea of “purposive interpretation” as it is discussed by Chief Justice Dickson and Justice La Forest in Sparrow, and ...
author2 Scott, Dayna Nadine
format Thesis
author Posluns, Michael Wilfred
author_facet Posluns, Michael Wilfred
author_sort Posluns, Michael Wilfred
title The Allocation of Burdens in Litigation Between First Nations and the Crown
title_short The Allocation of Burdens in Litigation Between First Nations and the Crown
title_full The Allocation of Burdens in Litigation Between First Nations and the Crown
title_fullStr The Allocation of Burdens in Litigation Between First Nations and the Crown
title_full_unstemmed The Allocation of Burdens in Litigation Between First Nations and the Crown
title_sort allocation of burdens in litigation between first nations and the crown
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10315/27996
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10315/27996
op_rights Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.
_version_ 1766001241411813376