Reframing Indigenous Territories: Private Property, Human Rights and Overlapping Claims (Thom 2014)

TITLE: Reframing Indigenous Territories: Private Property, Human Rights and Overlapping Claims

AUTHOR: Brian Thom

DATE: 2014

DESCRIPTION: Article appearing in American Indian Culture and Research Journal 38(4): 3 - 28

EXTRACT: “This paper considers the implications of the powerful "overlapping territories" map produced by the government of Canada in its attempt to refute human rights violations charges brought by Hul'qumi'num Treaty Group at the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. The map is at the core of Canada's defense in that it suggests that overlapping indigenous territories negate claims of exclusivity over the land and therefore any kind of obligations the state may have in respect of human or other indigenous rights in those lands. Revealing the limits of cartographic abstractions of indigenous spatialities, as well as the perilous stakes for indigenous peoples when engaging in conventional discourses of territoriality, these issues have broad significance…”

ACCESS: Free online access here

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Unsettling the Settlement Act: Land Conflict in the Past and Present on Vancouver Island (Black 2017)

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Sharing the Colonial Burden: Treaty Making and Reconciliation in Hul'qumi'num Territory (Egan 2012)