Moving Backwards: Does the Lack of Duty to Consult Create the Right to Infringe Aboriginal and Treaty Rights?

The federal and provincial governments have a duty to consult Aboriginal people when they propose to authorize development activities that may impact Aboriginal or treaty rights.This article comments on two recent cases addressing the role of third parties, such as municipalities and private busines...

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Main Authors: Imai, Shin, Stacey, Ashley
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Osgoode Digital Commons 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/clpe/262
https://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/context/clpe/article/1262/viewcontent/2013_13_CLPE_2225297.pdf
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author Imai, Shin
Stacey, Ashley
author_facet Imai, Shin
Stacey, Ashley
author_sort Imai, Shin
collection Unknown
description The federal and provincial governments have a duty to consult Aboriginal people when they propose to authorize development activities that may impact Aboriginal or treaty rights.This article comments on two recent cases addressing the role of third parties, such as municipalities and private businesses, in the duty to consult and accommodate. In Neskonlith Indian Band v Salmon Arm City and Wahgoshig First Nation v Solid Gold Resources Corp, the courts focused on whether the particular entity had a duty to consult. The consequence of finding no duty to consult was that the activity in dispute could proceed. This case commentary argues that the courts conflate who has the duty to consult and whether consultation is necessary before a project can proceed. These are two separate legal issues. Consultation is a condition precedent to proceeding with a project that infringes or potentially infringes Aboriginal rights.
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genre_facet First Nations
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https://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/context/clpe/article/1262/viewcontent/2013_13_CLPE_2225297.pdf
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spelling ftyorkunivohls:oai:digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca:clpe-1262 2025-06-15T14:27:18+00:00 Moving Backwards: Does the Lack of Duty to Consult Create the Right to Infringe Aboriginal and Treaty Rights? Imai, Shin Stacey, Ashley 2013-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/clpe/262 https://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/context/clpe/article/1262/viewcontent/2013_13_CLPE_2225297.pdf unknown Osgoode Digital Commons https://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/clpe/262 https://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/context/clpe/article/1262/viewcontent/2013_13_CLPE_2225297.pdf Comparative Research in Law & Political Economy aboriginal rights duty to consult and accommodate First Nations mining company municipality treaty rights text 2013 ftyorkunivohls 2025-05-28T03:36:41Z The federal and provincial governments have a duty to consult Aboriginal people when they propose to authorize development activities that may impact Aboriginal or treaty rights.This article comments on two recent cases addressing the role of third parties, such as municipalities and private businesses, in the duty to consult and accommodate. In Neskonlith Indian Band v Salmon Arm City and Wahgoshig First Nation v Solid Gold Resources Corp, the courts focused on whether the particular entity had a duty to consult. The consequence of finding no duty to consult was that the activity in dispute could proceed. This case commentary argues that the courts conflate who has the duty to consult and whether consultation is necessary before a project can proceed. These are two separate legal issues. Consultation is a condition precedent to proceeding with a project that infringes or potentially infringes Aboriginal rights. Text First Nations Unknown Indian
spellingShingle aboriginal rights
duty to consult and accommodate
First Nations
mining company
municipality
treaty rights
Imai, Shin
Stacey, Ashley
Moving Backwards: Does the Lack of Duty to Consult Create the Right to Infringe Aboriginal and Treaty Rights?
title Moving Backwards: Does the Lack of Duty to Consult Create the Right to Infringe Aboriginal and Treaty Rights?
title_full Moving Backwards: Does the Lack of Duty to Consult Create the Right to Infringe Aboriginal and Treaty Rights?
title_fullStr Moving Backwards: Does the Lack of Duty to Consult Create the Right to Infringe Aboriginal and Treaty Rights?
title_full_unstemmed Moving Backwards: Does the Lack of Duty to Consult Create the Right to Infringe Aboriginal and Treaty Rights?
title_short Moving Backwards: Does the Lack of Duty to Consult Create the Right to Infringe Aboriginal and Treaty Rights?
title_sort moving backwards: does the lack of duty to consult create the right to infringe aboriginal and treaty rights?
topic aboriginal rights
duty to consult and accommodate
First Nations
mining company
municipality
treaty rights
topic_facet aboriginal rights
duty to consult and accommodate
First Nations
mining company
municipality
treaty rights
url https://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/clpe/262
https://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/context/clpe/article/1262/viewcontent/2013_13_CLPE_2225297.pdf