Author(s)

;

Publication Year

Publisher

ISBN: 9781773630113-04

Categories: ,

 
View more details about this title
on the publisher's website:

Indigenous Legal Traditions from Roots to Renaissance

From: Pursuing Justice Second Edition

$3.10

OBJECTIVES

Introduction to Indigenous Law

Roots

A Logical Starting Point

Minimal Content

The Wetiko Example

Repression and Resiliance

Repression on a Massive Scale

Resilience and Perserverance

Recovery and Revitalization

The Failure of State Criminal Justice Systems

Aboriginal Justice In itiatives

How Justice Becomes Just Healing

Idealized Values as State Critiques

The Renaissance

Engaging with Indigenous Laws Seriously as Laws

Intellectual Shifts

Research Examples: Indigenous Legal Principles

Conclusion

Preview

Contributors

Val Napoleon

Val Napoleon is the Law Foundation Chair of Aboriginal Justice and Governance, Director of the Indigenous Law Research Unit and Director of the Indigenous Law Degree (JID/JD) in the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria.

Hadley Friedland

Hadley Friedland is an assistant professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Alberta. She was the first Research Director of the University of theIndigenous Law Research Unit. Hadley teaches and researches in the areas of Indigenous legal traditions, Aboriginal law, family law, child welfare and therapeutic jurisprudence.