Law (LAW) Courses>Comparative Indigenous Rights

LAW395 - Comparative Indigenous Rights

Description

Surveys development of law relating to Indigenous peoples.Examines significance of Indigenous peoples' laws for development of settler society's Indian Law and Aboriginal Rights law; comparative analysis of constitutional, statutory and jurisprudential rules of non-Indigenous society. Provides context for understanding doctrines and theories governing relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous states, history of Indigenous-non-Indigenous relations, and limits of state authority in Indigenous territories.

Units

1.5

Hours: lecture-lab-tutorial

3-0-0

Note(s)

  • Credit will be granted for only one of LAW 395, LAW 343 (if taken in the same topic)

Course offered by

Faculty of Law

Course schedules

Summer timetable available: February 15. Fall and Spring timetables available: May 15.

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