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Bad Judgment Revised And Updated The Myths Of First Nations Equality And Judicial Independence In Canada John Reilly

  • SKU: BELL-46263872
Bad Judgment Revised And Updated The Myths Of First Nations Equality And Judicial Independence In Canada John Reilly
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Bad Judgment Revised And Updated The Myths Of First Nations Equality And Judicial Independence In Canada John Reilly instant download after payment.

Publisher: Rocky Mountain Books Ltd
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 1 MB
Pages: 280
Author: John Reilly
ISBN: 9781771601979, 1771601973
Language: English
Year: 2019

Product desciption

Bad Judgment Revised And Updated The Myths Of First Nations Equality And Judicial Independence In Canada John Reilly by John Reilly 9781771601979, 1771601973 instant download after payment.

John Reilly's second book, Bad Judgment, details the author's battle with the Canadian justice system and the difficulties he faced trying to adapt Eurocentric Canadian law for the benefit of First Nations people across the country. This revised and updated edition looks at the future of the Canadian legal and political systems as they relate to this country's indigenous communities.Judge John Reilly, now retired, was, at age 30, the youngest jurist ever named to the Provincial Court of Alberta. For most of his 33 years on the bench he was the circuit judge for the Stoney Indian Reserve at Morley, Alberta. During his career he became interested in aboriginal justice. He saw the failure of the "white" legal system to do justice for aboriginal people, the harm caused to them by Canadian colonialism, and the failure of all levels of government, including tribal government, to alleviate their suffering and deal with the conflicting natures of European-style law and indigenous tradition and circumstance. As a result of these realizations, Judge Reilly vowed to improve the delivery of justice to the aboriginal people in his community and used his perceived power as a jurist to make changes to improve the lives of the people in his jurisdiction. Along the way, he came into direct conflict with Canadian judicial administration and various questionable leaders among the echelons of both Canadian and First Nation governments.

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