Authors

Files

Download

Download Full Text (632 KB)

Description

Alaska Natives and Canadian aboriginal peoples have been late bloomers in securing land claims based on aboriginal title and its extinguishment. While the reasons for this delay relate to the discrete development of Indian policy in each country, both groups now find themselves seeking explicit governmental authority to regulate this domain. Despite the juridical premise that only those groups capable of controlling land have aboriginal claims to cede and/or extinguish, modern groups must secure federal confirmation of their sovereign powers. Barriers in each country are similar; so are the strategies employed.

Publication Date

11-13-1989

Keywords

Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA), Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA), Alaska Natives, bush justice, Canada, Canadian First Nations, Indian law, rural justice, sovereignty, subsistence

Handle

http://hdl.handle.net/11122/10740

From Land Rights to Sovereignty: Curious Parallels between Alaskan and Canadian Indigenous Peoples

Share

COinS