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Negotiating The Deal Comprehensive Land Claims Agreements In Canada Christopher Alcantara

  • SKU: BELL-30088600
Negotiating The Deal Comprehensive Land Claims Agreements In Canada Christopher Alcantara
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Negotiating The Deal Comprehensive Land Claims Agreements In Canada Christopher Alcantara instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Toronto Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.25 MB
Pages: 200
Author: Christopher Alcantara
ISBN: 9781442644779, 144264477X
Language: English
Year: 2013

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Negotiating The Deal Comprehensive Land Claims Agreements In Canada Christopher Alcantara by Christopher Alcantara 9781442644779, 144264477X instant download after payment.

This book provides the first systematic and comprehensive analysis of the factors that explain both completed and incomplete treaty negotiations between Aboriginal groups and the federal, provincial, and territorial governments of Canada. Since 1973, groups that have never signed treaties with the Crown have been invited to negotiate what the government calls "comprehensive land claims agreements," otherwise known as modern treaties, which formally transfer jurisdiction, ownership, and title over selected lands to Aboriginal signatories. Despite their importance, not all groups have completed such agreements - a situation that is problematic not only for governments but for Aboriginal groups interested in rebuilding their communities and economies.
Using in-depth interviews with Indigenous, federal, provincial, and territorial officials, Christopher Alcantara compares the experiences of four Aboriginal groups: the Kwanlin Dun First Nation (with a completed treaty) and the Kaska Nations (with incomplete negotiations) in Yukon Territory, and the Inuit (completed) and Innu (incomplete) in Newfoundland and Labrador. Based on the experiences of these groups, Alcantara argues that scholars and policymakers need to pay greater attention to the institutional framework governing treaty negotiations and, most importantly, to the active role that Aboriginal groups play in these processes.

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